Germiston High School


Germiston High School (established September 1917) is a South African English-medium government school based in Germiston. It is the second oldest high school in Germiston.

Germiston High School[1]
Location
Germiston High School, Rand Airport Road Germiston, Elandsfontein 108-Ir, Johannesburg, 2043
Information
Former nameSecondary School Germiston South
MottoScientia et Humanitas
(Science and Culture)
Established10 September 1917
FounderMr. C.R Harding
School districtEkurhuleni West
PrincipalMs R. Goosen
Websitegermistonhs.co.za

History


The school was established in 10 September 1917 by Mr R.C Harding. The schools first name was Secondary School Germiston which served as a unisex school till the boys and girls were separated. The school was housed temporarily in the building today occupied by Germiston South School. In April of the following year the school became known as the High School Germiston

A start was eventually made in 1922, and the building was officially opened by the Administrator of Transvaal on 1 August 1923. There was opposition to the site by many residents of Germiston who complained that it was too far out of town! Colours were selected in 1917 but there was difficulty in obtaining them because of the Great War, and for the same reason, when they were obtainable, they were not of a very good quality.

Mr R.J. Johnson became headmaster in 1919, a position he occupied until 1924, when he was succeeded by Mr F.N. Gammidge. At the beginning of the 1925 season the school game was changed from soccer to “rugger” and during the same year the cadet detachment had the honour of providing a guard of honour to H.R.H the Prince of Wales, (to later become King Edward VIII) on the occasion of his visit to Germiston.

Mr W. Main succeeded Mr Gammidge in 1934 and was headmaster throughout the war years. Mr H.C. Robinson was the incumbent after Mr Main, serving as headmaster from 1946 until 1960.

At the beginning of the fifties the Transvaal Education Department (TED) decided to separate the boys and girls. In 1951 the girls moved to Lambton, to the building is today occupied by Delville Laerskool.

Miss E.B Bergen was then appointed headmistress, a position she occupied for the rest of the school's thirteen years existence[2]

The Germiston Boys High School, under Mr Robinson, occupied the Lake Grounds building. Mr J. Lane, an old boy of Germiston High, took over the reins of office when Mr Robinson retired in 1960, and held this position until the end of 1963, when he left to take up the position of Headmaster of Greenside High.

Sport

Germiston High School provides rugby, soccer, tennis, netball, basketball, chess, athletics and swimming matches which they participate with other schools in Ekurhuleni

Rugby

Under the administration of Golden Rugby Union, Germiston High have been known as the best team in the league. Their winning record is indomitable and they have been invited to many rugby tournaments in South Africa.[3]

School Subjects

The school offers the following subjects:

Notable alumni

Academics

In November 2018 several Germiston High School students were invited to the Gauteng Province Mathematical Olympiad. These Germistonians received prizes for their results.[5]

gollark: Emulate it.
gollark: ALL your computers.
gollark: Actually, Linux is just rebranded Windows.
gollark: Why stop there when you could use Windows 3↑↑↑↑3, which is 3↑↑↑↑3/11 times more than Windows 11?
gollark: Windows 98 is 8.9 times more than Windows 11, so you should use it.

References

  1. "Gauteng schools with the most applications for 2019". November 14, 2018.
  2. Jones, Rodney (6 September 2016). "Germiston High School - Class of 1976". amethyst.co.za. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  3. "#IMadeMyMark: Germiston High learners share their views on voting". Germiston City News. 26 April 2019. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  4. Frängsmyr, Tore, ed. (2003). "Sydney Brenner". Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 2002. Stockholm: Nobel Foundation.
  5. "Germiston High proud of Maths whizzes". Germiston City News. 6 November 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2019.

Official website

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