Randwick Boys High School

Randwick Boys' High School (RBHS) is a high school located in Randwick, Sydney, Australia, between Rainbow Street and Avoca Street. It is a boys' high school operated by the New South Wales Department of Education and Training with students from years 7 to 12. The school was established in 1944 as a junior high school, gaining full high school status in 1949. The history of the school can be traced back to 1883 with the establishment of Randwick Public School.

Randwick Boys High School
Address
Rainbow Street and Avoca Street

, ,
2031

Australia
Coordinates33°55′30.10″S 151°14′18.51″E
Information
TypePublic secondary day school
Mottoes'Guiding young men to success'
'Labore et Honore '
(Work and Honour)
Established1883 (public school)
1944 (junior high school)
1949 (high school)[1]
PrincipalLance Raskall
Years offered7 - 12
GenderBoys-only
Enrolment855 (7–12)[2]
CampusRainbow and Avoca Streets
Houses     Vikings
     Spartans
     Titans
     Romans
Colour(s)          White and bottle green
WebsiteRandwick Boys High School

History and Campus

The history of Randwick Boys dates back to 1883, when Randwick Public School was established by the NSW government. The school, to accommodate 200 students, was built on land at the top of Avoca Street, Randwick, with Mr E.M. Grant as the first Headmaster.[3]

From that time it grew steadily and frequent building additions were made, transforming the original construction into the present school now occupied by Randwick Primary and Infants School and the Randwick North High School. One of the most notable headmasters during this period was Alfred Godwin Alanson, who was Headmaster from 1907 to 1928. During his tenure, the school's reputation enabled it to be upgraded to Randwick Superior Public School in 1913, providing a commercial secondary course, and then to an "intermediate high school" in 1920.[4]

Alanson's successor from 1929, E. Nettleship, put forward the idea in 1930 that Randwick Intermediate should be made into a full five-year high school. The first version of the school badge was designed in this year. The School motto "Labore et Honore" (Work and Honour) is credited to have been devised by a Latin/English teacher, Harry Kresner, around 1948. The headmaster from 1941, F. Purnell, led the push that resulted in the school being further upgraded to the independent Randwick Boys Junior High School in 1944. This later led to the establishment of a full high school in 1949, thus giving Randwick equal status with all other full high schools in New South Wales. Purnell thus became the first headmaster of Randwick Boys High School.[4]

By the early 1950s there were calls to relocate the school to a new site recently obtained by the Department of Education, on the corner of Rainbow and Avoca Streets. A few temporary buildings were being erected at this time. Norman Taylor, who had become headmaster in 1952, led the move of the school, with 1956 seeing the first year of full occupation by students. The school was officially opened on 11 March 1959 by Robert Heffron, then the NSW Minister for Education, including the dedication of The W.M. Gollan Assembly Hall after the former Minister and long-serving Member for Randwick, William Gollan, who had assisted in the process leading to the establishment of Randwick Boys, and the R.J. Heffron Library.[5]

In 1962 the Waratah Shield, the state knockout competition for rugby, was introduced and was won by Randwick in its first year, and again in 1975, 1978 and 1982. The cadet unit was also reformed in 1963, only to be disbanded again in the mid-1970s following the end of federal funding for cadet units. Due to the implementation of the Wyndham Scheme from 1962 to 1968, which created an extra year at school, overcrowding became a major problem and a new building scheme was initiated to deal with this problem. As a result, several new buildings and a library were completed, which were opened on 19 August 1976 by the Member for Coogee, Michael Cleary.[6] Since the 1990s, Randwick Boys has participated in the Rock Eisteddfod Challenge (or The Show) jointly with its sister school, Randwick Girls' High School. Many places have been gained by the combined team, first reaching the finals in 1995, being a regular finalist since that time and winning the Premier Division in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006 and 2007.[7] It was nicknamed "The Show" and "Rock Eisteddfod".

Notable alumni

  • David Warner (cricketer) David Warner - Australian National Cricketer
  • Alan Abadee AM RFD QC – Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (1990–2000)[8]
  • Daryl Braithwaite – Australian pop singer best known as the lead vocalist of Sherbet
  • Richard Butler AC – Australian diplomat and former Governor of Tasmania
  • David Dale – Writer, journalist, and ABC Radio broadcaster
  • Robert Dewley – Member of NSW Parliament for Drummoyne (1947–1953)
  • Mike Gallacher – Former Member of NSW Legislative Council and Minister
  • George Glinatsis – Councillor of the City of Botany Bay (1991–2016) and Deputy Mayor (1995–2015).[9]
  • Andrew Robert Korda AM MA MHL MB BS FRCOG FRANZCOG Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Western Sydney; Consultant Emeritus, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney
  • Air Marshal Sir Harold Martin KCB DSO DFC AFC – RAF officer, pilot and ADC to the Queen
  • Max Metzker – Australian Olympic swimmer
  • Bruce Notley-Smith – Former Mayor of Randwick and Former Member of NSW Parliament for Coogee (2011–2019)
  • Ron Solomon – Justice of the District Court of New South Wales[10]
  • George Souris – Former Member of the NSW Parliament for Upper Hunter (1988-2015), former Leader of NSW National Party.
  • Ray Stehr – Australian rugby league footballer
  • Henri Szeps OAM – Australian film and theatre actor
  • Cyril Towers – Australian rugby union player
  • Reece Robinson - Australian rugby league player
  • Dick Thornett - Australian representative in rugby union, rugby league and water polo. Member of Sport Australia Hall of Fame.
  • Greg Gardiner - Was appointed chief executive of John Fairfax Limited in November 1980.

Houses

Randwick Boys has four representative houses that students are in by position from 2011:

  • Vikings (green)
  • Spartans (red)
  • Titans (yellow)
  • Romans (blue)
gollark: This example code responds to ~ping with Pong!
gollark: ACTUAL feature suggestions?
gollark: It's glorious.
gollark: ```rust#[macro_use] extern crate serenity;use serenity::client::{Client, EventHandler};use serenity::framework::standard::StandardFramework;use std::env;struct Handler;impl EventHandler for Handler {}pub fn main() { // Login with a bot token from the environment let mut client = Client::new(&env::var("DISCORD_TOKEN").expect("token"), Handler) .expect("Error creating client"); client.with_framework(StandardFramework::new() .configure(|c| c.prefix("~")) .cmd("ping", ping)); if let Err(why) = client.start() { println!("An error occurred while running the client: {:?}", why); }}command!(ping(_context, message) { let _ = message.reply("Pong!");});```This is the example code, admittedly, yes.
gollark: It's in Rust.

See also

References

  1. "Randwick Boys High". Government Schools of New South Wales from 1848. NSW Education and Communities. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  2. "Randwick Boys High School". School Locator. NSW Public Schools. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  3. "Beginnings". History of Randwick Boys. RBHS. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  4. "Evolution". History of Randwick Boys. RBHS. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  5. "A New Beginning". History of Randwick Boys. RBHS. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  6. "Achievements". History of Randwick Boys. RBHS. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  7. "Rock Eisteddfod". Extra-Curricular. RBHS. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  8. "Hon. Mr Justice Alan Richard Abadee (QC, LLB, RFD)". Person. NSW State Records. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  9. "Councillor George Glinatsis, Deputy Mayor of the City of Botany Bay". City of Botany Bay. Archived from the original on 16 November 1999. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
  10. "The Student Body". History of Randwick Boys. RBHS. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.