Hamilton's Fraser High School
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Hamilton's Fraser High School
Te Kura Tuarua o Taniwharau |
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- | |
Motto | - |
Type | State Co-educational Secondary School (Y9-13) |
Year established | 1920 |
Address | 72 Ellicott Road , Hamilton |
Principal | M S Elliott |
School roll | 1817 |
Socio-economic decile (10 is high) | 5 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | |
Website | http://www.wave.co.nz/~hfhs/school.html |
Hamilton's Fraser High School (HFHS) is a secondary school in Hamilton, New Zealand. The school began in 1920 as Hamilton Technical Day School (later amended to Hamilton's Technical High School in 1924). From its central city site on the Garden Place Hill, now occupied by Wintec, the school was an integral part of the growth and development of Hamilton. For the next 50 years, many of the pupils went on to become influential commercial, political, sporting and cultural leaders in Hamilton.
In 1970 the school moved to the northwest suburbs of Hamilton and was re-established as a comprehensive co-educational secondary school. At this time the school was called Fraser High School. The school took its name from the original Principal, Whampoa Fraser. In 1998 the name was modified slightly to Hamilton's Fraser High School to reflect their historical link to Hamilton Technical Day School, and to give a stronger geographical link to Hamilton. The Māori name of the school is Te Kura Tuarua o Taniwharau.
Hamiltons Fraser High School is the home to the country's last school-based cadet unit. The Hamilton's Fraser High School Corps unit provides on a rotating basis the duty of providing honour guards to the cenotaph on ANZAC Day, sharing this with the Hamilton City Cadet Corps, Hamilton Air Training Corps, TS Rangiri Sea Cadet Corps.
The principal of the school, Martin Elliot, caused some controversy over his use of obscenities during his ill-fated run for the Mayoralty of Hamilton.