Calabar High School
Calabar High School | |
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The Utmost for the Highest | |
Address | |
61 Red Hills Road Calabar High School | |
Coordinates | 18°01′44″N 76°48′34″W / 18.0289037°N 76.8094218°WCoordinates: 18°01′44″N 76°48′34″W / 18.0289037°N 76.8094218°W |
Information | |
Religious affiliation(s) | Christianity |
Denomination | Baptist |
Established | 1912 |
Founded | September 12, 1912 |
Founder | Revds. Ernest Price and David Davis |
Status | Open |
School number | +1 (876) 931-4723 |
Principal | Albert Corcho |
Grades | 7-13 |
Gender | Males |
Hours in school day | Approximately seven (7) hours |
Houses |
Sparta(Yellow) Rome(Blue) Athens(Purple) Corinth(Green) Troy(Red) |
School colour(s) | Green and Black |
Sports | Track and Field, Football, Cricket, Basketball |
Nickname | C-Bar,Rabalac |
Publication | Chronicles of Rabalac |
Yearbook | The Green and Black Review |
Calabar High School is a prominent all-male, secondary school in Kingston, Jamaica. It was established by the Jamaica Baptist Union in 1912 for the children of Baptist ministers and the children of the poor blacks and was named after the former slave port Calabar, now in Nigeria. Today, it is considered one of the finest schools in the country, producing at least five Rhodes Scholars and is respected for its outstanding performance in track and field.[1]
History
- Early beginnings
In 1839, William Knibb, Thomas Burchell and James Phillippo, the three leading English Baptist missionaries working in Jamaica, moved for the creation of a college for training native Baptist ministers. Out of this effort, Calabar Theological College came into being in 1843, sited in the little village of Calabar, near Rio Bueno, in Trelawny Parish. The town Calabar was named by the Spanish after a town in Nigeria of the same name.
In 1868, Calabar College was removed to East Queen Street, Kingston, where a "normal" school for training teachers and a high school for boys were added. Shortly afterwards, the high school was closed and the teacher-training activities ceased, leaving the practising school—now Calabar All-Age on Sutton Street—and the theological college, which was relocated at Studley Park (on Slipe Pen Road) in 1904.
- High school established
At the beginning of the 1900s, there were very few high schools in existence to educate the sons of the working class and the rising middle class. It was to meet this need that, in September 1912, through the instrumentality of the Revs. Ernest Price and David Davidson—Principal and Tutor, respectively, of Calabar Theological College—Calabar High School came into existence under the joint sponsorship of the Baptist Missionary Society of London and the Jamaica Baptist Union.
The high school opened September 12, 1912, with 26 boys and the foundation was firmly laid in the Christian tradition. Rev. Price was the first headmaster. Within a year enrollment had reached 80 and the school had received government recognition. An early benefactor was Miss Elizabeth Purscell who, in 1919, bequeathed the adjoining property on Studley Park Road in trust for the school. The school offered boarding facilities on nearby premises —the Hostel— to facilitate boys attending from outside the Corporate Area of Kingston.
- Relocation
In 1952, Calabar Theological College and Calabar High School moved from their location at Studley Park to Red Hills Road, where 60 acres (240,000 m2) of land (then called "Industry Pen") had been purchased for the re-siting of both institutions. At the time, this was a thinly populated, undeveloped area and many people thought the move unwise. The new school was built to house 350 boys but before long extensions became necessary. Boarding facilities were provided up to 1970. When boarding ceased, dormitories were converted to workshops.
In 1967 the Theological College moved to Mona as a part of the United Theological College of the West Indies and the High School took over the vacated space. This is the section of the premises which the boys now call "Long Island."
At about this time a portion of the Calabar lands was sold, to be used for commercial and residential development. A privately run Extension School was added in 1971.
In 1978, the school adopted a shift system incorporating the day and extension schools, at the request of the Ministry of Education. There are over 1600 students on roll with eight forms in each year group between grades 7 and 11, and four forms in grades 12 and 13 (sixth form).
- Accomplishments
Major scholarships —such as the Jamaica and Rhodes Scholarships— have been awarded to Calabar students. Sports, particularly athletics, have always been important and the Inter-Schools’ Athletics Championships (“Champs”) Trophy has been won 23 times since 1930.
One major accomplishment is in the Schools' Challenge Quiz, where Calabar is the only school to win the competition three years in a row, and has been to the most finals in one decade, six (2001, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2012).
Insignia
- Motto
The school motto is "The Utmost for the Highest".
- Colours
The official school colours are green and black.
- Mascot
The school's mascot is a roaring lion, a homage to the school being named after the Nigeria city and former slave port of the same name.
Extracurricular activities
In sports the school dominates all major sporting areas including track and field, football, basketball, cricket, badminton, and rugby. Calabar was the first school in Jamaica to have a swimming pool and won the inter-schools swimming competition repeatedly for many years. When the school was relocated to Red Hills Road in 1953, the boys helped to construct the new pool there. At the Annual Boys and Girls Athletics Championships, the competition for which the school is most famous, Calabar is the only boys school to have won Champs titles in every decade since the 1930s.
In 2012, the school won both School Challenge Quiz and the all-island Boys Athletics Championships title (its 24th overall).
In 2008, the school Rugby Union team created history by placing for the first time a team in the finals of all four competitions entered. The boys won the Under-19 15-a-side competition for the second time in school's history and were runners-up in the under 16 version. The team was coached by old boys Sheldon Phillips and Romeo Monteith with Nesta Dawkins as manager.
In Rugby Football the school became the first to win the U19 15s championship 3 consecutive years (2008–2010). The school also won the inaugural U16 Rugby League championship in 2009.
Calabar is the only school to have won the popular School's Challenge Quiz on three consecutive occasions.
Notable alumni
Calabar has produced a number of prominent members of Jamaican society including:
- Academia
- Prof. Norman Girvan, former Secretary General of the Association of Caribbean States
- Prof. Keith Ellis,Professor Emeritus, Department of Spanish & Portuguese(Retired)/Author, University of Toronto, Ontario Canada http://www.whoswhoinblackcanada.com/2010/12/18/dr-keith-ellis/
- Dr. Clive Forrester, Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics, York University, Toronto, Ontario Canada
- Dr. Edward I. Morris, MD Washington D.C., USA Board Certified 1996 Internal Medicine & 2009 Cardiovascular Disease 2009
- Dr. Donald C. Phillibert, MD New York Board Certified, USA
- Dr. Dennis Hugh George Forrester, MD Toronto, Ontario Canada http://sharenews.com/dr-dennis-forrester-honoured-by-calabar-old-boys/
- Dr. Roland Christopher Jung, MD Nova Scotia Canada
- Richard George Henriquez Henriquez is one of Canada's most imaginative architects work was celebrated in 1994 at the Canadian Centre for Architecture
- Arts and culture
- Carl Abrahams, painter
- John Holt,
- Arnold Bertram, historian
- Damion "Baby Cham" Beckett,
- Michael Sharpe, news editor at Television Jamaica,
- Roger Mais, writer
- Wilmot Perkins, talk show host
- Patrick Anderson, sports director at Television Jamaica
- Business and finance
- Paul Geddes, co-founder of the Red Stripe beer brand.
- Claude Robinson, former general manager, Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation
- Ewart Walters, editor The Spectrum, author
- Politics and law
- Percival James Patterson, former Prime Minister of Jamaica
- Derrick Smith, Minister of Mining and Technology
- John Junor, former Minister of Health
- Francis Forbes, former Commissioner of Police
- E.G. Green, former Parliamentary Ombudsman
- Sports
- Dennis Johnson, former UTECH Sports Administrator (and former world record holder at 100 yards)
- Arthur Wint, Olympic Gold Medallist runner and former world record holder
- Chris Stokes and Dudley Stokes members of the Jamaican Bobsled Team that inspired the movie Cool Runnings
- George Rhoden, Olympic Gold Medalist runner
- Herb McKenley, Olympic Gold Medalist sprinter and former world record holder
- Nehemiah Perry, former Jamaican cricketer and West Indies Cricket Board selector
- Maurice Smith, decathlete, World Championship Silver Medallist
- Maurice Wignall, Commonwealth Games Gold Medalist
- Dwight Thomas, Olympic Gold Medalist
- Warren Weir Olympic and World Championship Medalist
- Andrew Riley Olympic Hurdler
- Jason Morgan Olympic discus thrower
- Josef Robertson Olympic Hurdler
Principals
1912 | Rev. Ernest Price | ||
1936 | 1940 | Rev. Herbert | |
1940 | Rev. David Davis | ||
1972 | 1980 | Arthur J Edgar | |
1980 | 1985 | Roy Atkinson | Teacher 1962-1980 |
1985 | 1995 | Joseph Earle | Vice Principal 1976 -1977 |
1996 | 2002 | Lloyd Brian | |
2002 | 2012 | Lincoln Thaxter | |
2013 | present | Albert Corcho | |
See also
- Jamaica High School Football Champions
- Education in Jamaica
- List of schools in Jamaica
- Principal: Walter Murray-White : 1949-
- Principal from 1959 to 1961 Sydney Thomson
- Principal: Walter Foster
References
- ↑ "Register of Jamaican Rhodes Scholars". 2012. Retrieved 2012-10-14.
External links
- Aerial view.
- Photos:
- Calabar Old Boys' Association
- Calabar Old Boys' Association (Canada Chapter)
- Calabar Old Boys Association (Atlanta Chapter)
- Calabar Old Boys Association (UK Chapter)
- Calabar Lions (community website and blog)
- Jamaica Baptist Union
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