Saint Andrew's School, Singapore

Name St Andrew's School
School Code SAJS - 5009

SASS - 7015 SAJC - 0804

Country Singapore
Town Woodsville, Potong Pasir
Established 8 September 1862
Type Government-Aided, Single-Session
Principals SAJS - Wong Bin Eng (Mrs)

SASS - Lucy Toh (Mrs)

SAJC - Mark Lo Khee Tian (Mr)

Students SAJS, SASS - Boys

SAJC - Co-ed

Levels Primary 1 to 6

Secondary 1 to 5
Junior College 1 to 2

Colours Navy Blue and White
Motto Up and On
Enrolment 'Approx. 5000'
Websites SAJS, SASS,

SAJC

St Andrew's School is a complex of schools in Singapore, affiliated to each other as well as to the Anglican Church of Singapore. It comprises St Andrew's Junior School, St Andrew's Secondary School and St Andrew's Junior College.

The junior and secondary schools have always only admitted male pupils, but female pupils were admitted to the pre-university or 'A' level classes when they were run from the senior school previously. St Andrew's Junior College has always been co-educational since being separated from the secondary school.

The school is also affiliated with other Anglican and Presbyterian schools in Singapore, including St Margaret's Primary School, St Margaret's Secondary School, St Hilda's Primary School, St Hilda's Secondary School, the Anglican High School, Presbyterian High School and Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary School.

The name of the school is usually abbreviated as SA or SAS (or SAJS for the junior school and SASS for the secondary school), and the junior college as SAJC. Its pupils and alumni ('Old Boys' and 'Old Girls') are referred to as Saints.

Chin Chew Street (1862–1863)

SAS was founded on 8 September 1862 by the Revd Edward Sherman Venn through adopting a private institution owned by Sim Quee and Tye Kim in Chin Chew Street, in Singapore. The Anglican missionary led by Venn funded the school. Sim Quee and Tye Kim remained as headmasters of their school. This was unusual for the day as most missionary schools were not usually headed by Asians. The school was then known as the St Andrew's Church of England Mission School.

Upper Hokkien Street (1863–1872)

On 10 September 1863, the School moved to Upper Hokkien Street because of the need for a better building and more space for the growing School. Soon after, Mr Cheok Loy Fatt was appointed the Headmaster.

After a couple of years, the school suffered from financial difficulties, and financial support was withdrawn in 1866 (NB: Rev. Edward Sherman Venn died in 1866, and this may explain why financial support was withdrawn at this time). In 1872, the Colonial Chaplain Canon J.A. Beccles successfully applied to the Government for financial aid. Thus, on 22 May 1872, St Andrew's School became a grant-in-aid institution.

Victoria Street (1872–1875)

In 1872, Canon Beccles was succeeded by the Revd George Frederick Hose as Colonial Chaplain. Meanwhile, the growing School moved to Victoria Street. Hose invited the Revd William Henry Gomes to act as School Superintendent, in which the School prospered and grew.

During the early days at the Victoria Street site, both Hose and Gomes knew that the growth of the School would be hampered by poor accommodation. Their hard work was rewarded by the Government giving the School a 4-acre (16,000 m2) piece of land on the then Government Hill with a frontage on Stamford Road.

Stamford Road (1875–1940)

The first building to go up was the Chapel in 1875 and in that same year, the School vacated its cramped premises in Victoria Street and moved into the Stamford Road site. Classes were held in the Chapel which also became an important centre of public worship.

The Revd J. Romanis Lee, who became headmaster from 1912, was a benefactor of the School as it acquired many of its modern characteristics during his period as headmaster. He set about expanding the premises of the School and raised the status of the School from a second grade school to top grade in 1914, in which the school started to offer the Senior Cambridge Examination. He also established a tradition of sports in the School; the school excelled in boxing and rugby union.

Mr Joseph Lee became headmaster in 1924 and the enrolment increased to 800. Lee established John Oxenham's poem "Up and On" as the School Song. The first issue of the School Magazine, aptly called "Up and On", made its appearance in 1928.

The Revd Reginald Keith Sorby Adams succeeded Lee as the next headmaster on 1 October 1934. By that time, St Andrew's became well known for its boxing and rugby. The need for a bigger area than the cramped site at Stamford Road had become a problem by the early 1930s. There were scarcely enough classrooms and there was no playing field for a School which showed so much enthusiasm and aptitude for outdoor games.

This site ultimately became the site of the National Library of Singapore from 1960, before it moved to Victoria Street.

Pre-War Woodsville (1940–1942)

In 1938, Woodsville Estate comprising 7.49 hectares (18.5 acres) of land, was purchased for $60,000. Adams, assisted by Archdeacon Graham White, played a major role in the moving of the School to the Woodsville site, after previously rejecting two sites in Tanjong Katong and on Serangoon Road. The two-storey School buildings were completed and officially opened by S. W. Jones, the Officer Administering the Government, on 29 July 1940. The start of World War II in Singapore had the School closed.

Post-War Woodsville (1945–1990)

Immediately after the war, the School was the first to re-open. The school was then divided into Lower School and Upper School. Until the arrival of Adams who had just been released from internment, Dr D.D. Chelliah acted as headmaster. As the School population grew, the School grew as well with the addition of another floor in 1952. The Lim Teck Kin Tower was also added in that year.

In 1955, the Lower School was renamed the Junior School, and the Upper School was renamed Secondary School. In 1956, due to the rapid growth of the Junior School, it was further separated into two schools: Junior I and Junior II. Each junior school was run by its own headmaster, but this changed from 1960 onwards when both schools shared the same head.

The St Andrew's Village at Potong Pasir. Houses all the three St Andrew's schools as well as The Diocese of Singapore and Church of the Ascension.

In 1969, Pre-University classes started and in 1978, St Andrew's Junior College was established and moved to Malan Road. By the 1980s, the Woodsville site was unable to handle the growth of both Junior Schools and the Secondary School. Meanwhile, with nearby Potong Pasir developed, the School requested that a 4.18 hectare site allocated for education would be used for the St Andrew's Secondary School. Construction of the Secondary School started on 3 November 1984 and the buildings were opened in July 1986.

One Family Unbroken (1990-present)

In 1990, the two junior schools were combined into one school: St Andrew's Junior School. In 1996, the school had to relocate due to noise pollution from the recently upgraded Pan-Island Expressway. The school was relocated in January 1996 and the new school building was declared open by the then Minister for Education, Rear-Admiral Teo Chee Hean, in 1997.

As part of the St Andrew's Village project, all three schools were planned to return to Woodsville and Potong Pasir. Renovation and expansion of the Junior School started in 2003, and the new buildings opened in December 2004. Construction of a new Secondary School started in 2003, opposite the Junior School along Francis Thomas Drive, and opened in December 2004. Construction of the Junior College started in June 2003 after the Secondary School vacated the site and shifted to its holding location. The Junior College opened in December 2005 and a ceremony was held to mark its return to Woodsville/Potong Pasir. The Village was officially opened on 26 August 2006 at the 1000-seater Cultural Centre located at the Junior College.

In addition to these three schools, The village also houses the (Anglican) Diocesan Office, the Ascension Kindergarten and three church buildings: the Chapel of the Resurrection, Chapel of the Holy Spirit and Church of Ascension. Some of the new facilities at the Village includes an Olympic size swimming pool, a 1,000-seat performing arts centre (Cultural Centre), air-conditioned school halls, gymnasiums, indoor basketball court, roof-top basketball court, tennis courts, cafe, rockwall, astro-turf artificial field and a sheltered bridge across the Kallang River to connect the Junior and Secondary Schools to the Junior College across the river. In 2010, piling work began for the construction of St Andrew's Hall, a 12-storey hostel with sufficient rooms to accommodate up to 600 students with facilities including a dining room for 600 people, an adjoining multipurpose hall as well as a clinic to serve the residents of the hall and St Andrew's Village. St Andrew's Hall was officially opened in 2012.

There are currently plans to construct a combined indoor sports hall that will be situated over the Kallang River. Fund-raising efforts for the project are currently ongoing. When completed, it will be the first project of its kind in Singapore.

Culture

Saints' Spirit

The students of the school are encouraged to support the school sports teams. Particularly during semifinals and finals matches, the entire school is usually in full force at the venue to support the school team, wearing their widely recognised blue and white hoops. Cheering is led by the Prefectorial Board and the Student Government. Such enthusiasm towards school support is quite uncommon in other schools.

The school's rugby team also has its own battle-cry which is called the Saints' Battle-Cry. It is normally mistaken by people as the haka. It is usually performed before the start of the match at a Final or at special events.

The Saints' Spirit also permeated into music producing members of such recording artists as The Sundowners, Tornados, Wes Cossacks, Straydogs, and Electrons with Rex Goh Tee Huat. The latter went on to join Australia's Air Supply.

Sports

The school has been famous since the 1930s, and in 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1966 concurrently, under the dedicated tutelage of late Mr Keong Snr, it rose to a new high with its boxing and rugby dominance over Singapore Boy's Town, Anglo-Chinese School, and Raffles Institution. Since the 1970s, the school has won the National championships consistently. The 1990s saw competition from Anglo-Chinese School (Independent) and Raffles Institution, but St Andrew's has had a major revival in the sport in recent years.

The school also excels in Cricket and Hockey. Under the guidance of the cricket master Mr Philip Ng, the school's cricket team saw success from 1998 onwards, with eight of its eleven players being called up for national Under-15 representations in their first year of the game.[1] The rivalry between Raffles Institution and St. Andrew's continued in the ovals as the teams battled for the championship titles over the next few years.

Houses

The school has a house system aimed at intra-school sporting competitions. The school originally had eleven houses. Today, there are five houses throughout the School, from the Junior School to the Junior College. The five houses are named after important people in the school's history:

School Song, Hymn and Crest

All three schools share the same school song, school hymn and school crest.

School Song
The school song was introduced by Mr Joseph Lee. The words of the song are from John Oxenham's poem Up and On.

Verse 1
Lives are in the making here,
Hearts are in the waking here,
Mighty undertaking here,
Up and On!

We are arming for the fight,
Pressing on with all our might,
Pluming wings for higher flight,
Up and On!

Chorus
Up Boys (Saints)! truest fame
Lies in high endeavour;
Play the game! keep the flame
Burning brightly ever!

Verse 2
Fair before us lies the way,
Time for work and time for play;
Fill the measure while we may,
Up and On!

Life and time will not delay,
Time is running fast away,
Life is now today; today;
Up and On!

Verse 3
Foes in plenty we shall meet,
Hearts courageous scorn defeat;
So we press with eager feet,
Up and On!

Ever onward to the fight,
Ever upward to the Light,
Ever true to GOD and RIGHT,
Up and On!

School Hymn
Our Father, by whose servants,
Our School was built of old,
Whose hand has crowned Thy children,
With blessings manifold;
For Thy unfailing mercies,
Far strewn along our way,
With all who passed before us,
We praise Thy name today.

They reaped not where they laboured,
We reap what they have sown;
Our harvest may be garnered,
By ages yet unknown.
The days of old have dowered us
With gifts beyond all praise,
Our Father make us faithful
To serve the coming days.

Before us and beside us,
Still holden by Thy hand,
A cloud of unseen witness,
Our elder comrades stand;
One family unbroken,
We join in one acclaim;
One heart, one voice uplifting
To glorify Thy name.

School Crest
The official heraldic description of the crest is: Azure, a saltire argent, in chief keys, in base a tiger's face. Simply, the crest is a blue shield, with a silver diagonal cross. In the top quarter are two keys, and in the lower quarter is a tiger's face.

The blue shield and silver diagonal cross is the St Andrew's Cross. The keys represent the Keys to Knowledge and Heaven, and the tiger's face is a local symbol of strength.

Schools

St Andrew's Junior School

St Andrew's Junior School (SAJS) started off as the Lower School of St Andrew's School after World War 2. After being renamed in 1956, the school was split into two schools, but were combined in 1990. The school later moved to a site in Potong Pasir because of noise pollution caused by the recently upgraded Pan-Island Expressway in 1996.

Following plans for the St Andrew's Village, the school moved into new buildings at the same Potong Pasir site in December 2004 at 2 Francis Thomas Drive, Singapore 359337.

St Andrew's Secondary School

St Andrew's Secondary School started as the Upper School of St Andrew's School after World War 2. The school moved from the Woodsville site in July 1986 to its site in Potong Pasir across the Kallang River after the Woodsville buildings were deemed inadequate for the running of both the junior and senior classes. In mid-2003, the school shifted to the old Victoria School building at Kallang Bahru as a temporary holding site. As part of the St Andrew's Village project, the school has moved into new buildings opposite SAJS since 2005 at 15 Francis Thomas Drive, Singapore 359342. The premises incorporates Woodsville House which was earmarked as a heritage building. Woodsville House used to be the residences of the principals of St Andrew's School and is now used as the offices for the Head of Departments on the second floor and has a small heritage gallery on the ground floor.

St Andrew's Junior College

St Andrew's Junior College (SAJC) started as pre-university classes in 1969 and in 1978, moved to its site at 2 Malan Road. The college started the new year in 1978 with a brand new image, including a College Anthem of its own. However, in 1993, the College adopted back the original St Andrew's School Crest, motto, song and hymn. The College has since returned to Potong Pasir as of 2006 as part of the St Andrew's Village project. It is situated on the former SASS site at 55 Potong Pasir Avenue 1, Singapore 358389. A sheltered pedestrian bridge across the Kallang River connects the JC to the secondary and junior schools across the river.

A top view of St Andrew's Secondary School (left) and St Andrew's Junior School (right). The multi-coloured grandstand of the running track of St Andrew's Junior College (top right) can be seen as well.

Co-Curricular Activities

Type SAJS SASS SAJC
Uniform Units None
Sports & Games
Leadership
  • Christian Fellowship
  • Prefectorial Board
  • AFGM (Student Government)
  • Saints For Christ
  • Panel Of Prefects
  • Student Council
  • House Council
  • Media Resource Library (MRL)
  • Saints For Christ (A non-denominational Christian organisation entirely exclusive to SAS/SAJC only.)
Performing Arts
  • Choir
  • Drama
  • Military Band
  • Drama Club
  • Choir
  • Military Band
Clubs & Societies
  • Art Club
  • Chess Club
  • Info-Comm Club
  • Photography Club
  • Interact Club
  • Library
  • Science Society
  • Mathematics Society
  • Robotics Club
  • PA/AVA Club
  • Editorial Board
  • Youth Flying Club
  • Many Ways Of Seeing (MWOS)
  • English Language Society (ELS)
  • Chinese Language Drama and Debating Society (CLDDS)
  • Malay Language Drama and Debating Society (MLDDS)
  • Tamil Language Drama and Debating Society (TLDDS)
  • AVA Unit
  • Photography Club
  • Mentoring
  • Interact Club
  • Art Club
  • Chinese Society
  • Info Tech Club
  • Fitness Club
  • Green Club
  • Indian Cultural Society
  • Malay Cultural Society
  • SAJC Culinary And Homemaking Club
  • SAJC Debate and Oratorical Society
  • Science Discovery Club
  • Strategy Games Club
  • Saints Entrepreneurial Club
  • Saints Sports Club

National Schools Games - Championship Titles

Rugby

Cricket

Hockey

Others

Notable alumni

Politics

Law

Business

Science, Arts, Education, Journalism

Entertainment

Sports

References

  1. The New Paper/Thursday, April 30, 1998
  2. "Former F&N Executive Chairman Dr Michael Fam dies at 87". Dec 27, 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2014.

Media mentions

External links

Getting there

You can go there by taking the North East MRT Line and alight at the Potong Pasir MRT Station. Here are the buses that go there:

SBS Transit Trunk Services
8 Toa Payoh Bus Interchange Tampines Bus Interchange
13 Yio Chu Kang Bus Terminal Upper East Coast Bus Terminal
26 Toa Payoh Bus Interchange Bedok Bus Interchange
31 Toa Payoh Bus Interchange Tampines Bus Interchange
90 Toa Payoh Bus Interchange Airport Road (Loop) *90A: Terminates At Airport Road (KB Warehouse Complex)
107 Hougang Central Bus Interchange Shenton Way Bus Terminal
107M Hougang Central Bus Interchange Marina Centre (Loop)
133 Ang Mo Kio Bus Interchange Marina Centre (Loop)
142 Toa Payoh Bus Interchange Potong Pasir Ave 1 (Loop)
147 Hougang Central Bus Interchange Clementi Bus Interchange Wheelchair Accessible Bus Service (WAB) Euro III
151 Hougang Central Bus Interchange Kent Ridge Bus Terminal Wheelchair Accessible Bus Service Euro IV
154 Eunos Bus Interchange Boon Lay Bus Interchange
SMRT Buses Trunk Services
853 Yishun Bus Interchange Geylang Lorong 1 Bus Terminal Weekdays & Saturdays only
853C Yishun Bus Interchange Upper East Coast Bus Terminal Sundays and Public Holidays only
857 Yishun Bus Interchange Suntec City(Loop)
966 Woodlands Regional Bus Interchange Marine Parade Road/Parkway Parade
985 Choa Chu Kang Bus Interchange Geylang Lorong 1 Bus Terminal
SMRT Buses NightRider Services
NR6 HarbourFront Bus Interchange Anchorvale Drive (Loop)
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