Wellington College (New Zealand)

Wellington College

Firth Hall on the left with the school hall on the right
Lumen accipe et imperti - Receive The Light And Pass It On
Address
Dufferin Street
Mount Victoria
Wellington 6021
New Zealand
Coordinates 41°18′13″S 174°46′57″E / 41.30361°S 174.78250°ECoordinates: 41°18′13″S 174°46′57″E / 41.30361°S 174.78250°E
Information
Type Single Sex-Boys State Secondary (Year 9–13)
Established 1867
Ministry of Education Institution no. 275
Headmaster Roger Moses
School roll 1673[1] (March 2015)
Socio-economic decile 10Z[2]
Website www.wellington-college.school.nz

Wellington College is a state single-sex boys secondary school located in the Wellington, New Zealand suburb of Mount Victoria.

History

Opening of the Memorial Hall, Wellington College
Cricket game at Wellington College, c. 1900

Wellington College opened in 1867 as Wellington Grammar School in Woodward Street, though Sir George Grey gave the school a deed of endowment in 1853. In 1869 the school moved to a fine new, spired, wooden building on the hills above the central city in Clifton Terrace from where it could be seen from many places in Wellington.[3] In 1874 the college opened in a much larger building at its present location. The former boarding establishment at the College, Firth House, was named after Joseph Firth, the headmaster from 1892 to 1921.

Wellington College's Pavilion, Firth House and the Gifford Observatory were opened on 1 December, 1924. The War Memorial Hall was opened on 2 March, 1928, financially supported by £6000 from the Old Boys' Association.[4] The War Memorial Hall and classroom wings were demolished by the Ministry of Works and replaced in the 1960s with a new hall and seven-storey Tower classroom block due to its lack of earthquake reinforcements. The stained glass window from the front of the War Memorial Hall is now located in the front of the existing hall.

During the 1970s the Maths, Library and Technology blocks were opened, replacing the last of the War Memorial Hall building and classroom wings that opened in 1928. Also, the Old Boys Gymnasium was built on the eastern boundary of the campus replacing the swimming pool.

In 1980 Firth House was demolished to make way for a new gymnasium which opened in 1982. 1987 saw the opening of the Arts and Music block, and the Brierley Theatre, named after old boy Ron Brierley.

The first dedicated computer rooms in the College opened in 1992 in a new building located behind the school hall.

2001 saw the opening of the Science block, on the western boundary of the campus. In 2008 the Languages block opened, also located on the western boundary.

The campus also has many prefabricated buildings, some functioning as offices and some as classrooms.

The only "historical" buildings remaining on campus to this day are Firth Hall, the Pavilion and the Gifford Observatory.

About

Wellington College's enrolment zone mainly covers the central and western suburbs of Wellington (Rongotai College serves the southeastern suburbs, and Onslow College the northern suburbs).

Each year the school's rugby team plays in a competition with Nelson College, Christ's College, and Wanganui Collegiate School known as the "Quadrangular Tournament". Wellington are the reigning champions of this tournament and have been since 2003. Their current winning streak of ten titles in a row is the longest in the tournament's history.[5]

The school also competes in a local athletics competition known as "McEvedy Shield" along with St. Patrick's College (Town), St. Patrick's College, Silverstream and Rongotai College. Historically, Wellington College have won the shield 49 times since 1922, more than any other school.[6]

It is next to Wellington East Girls' College, also in Mount Victoria, and shares with that college the Gifford Observatory. Although Wellington College is situated next to Wellington East Girls' College, its sister college is Wellington Girls' College located in Thorndon.

In 2011, 2012 and 2013, Wellington College gained the highest number of scholarships in the New Zealand scholarship exams (128, 151 and 178 respectively), putting the school in top echelons of New Zealand's education system. [7]

Notable alumni

The Arts

Broadcasting & journalism

Business

Public service

Science

Sport

References

  1. "Directory of Schools - as at 7 April 2015". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 2015-04-08.
  2. "Decile Change 2014 to 2015 for State & State Integrated Schools". Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  3. William Main, Wellington Through a Victorian lens revisited, Steele Roberts Publishers, Wellington, 2011, p. 25, the endpapers and the dustjacket.
  4. Wellington College. | NZETC
  5. https://sites.google.com/a/wellington-college.school.nz/rugby-club/draws/quad-2011
  6. http://www.wellington-college.school.nz/node/273/sports/mcevedy-shield/history-of-the-mcevedy-shield
  7. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/local-papers/the-wellingtonian/8362283/Wgtn-Colleges-stunning-results
  8. "Henry Avery : Rugby Player". Militarian. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  9. "Ray Wallace". Hutt City Council. Retrieved 13 October 2013.

2. A.W Beasley, The Light Accepted : 125 Years of Wellington College, Board of Trustees of Wellington College, Wellington, 1992

External links

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