Clarendon High School for Girls: Difference between revisions
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==Academics== |
==Academics== |
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Clarendon High School for Girls is the most academic school in [[East London, Eastern Cape|East London]] by matric pass rate in the year. |
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* 2010 - 100% |
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* 2011 - 100% |
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* 2012 - 100% |
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* 2013 - 100% |
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* 2014 - 100% |
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==Sport== |
==Sport== |
Revision as of 12:24, 9 May 2020
Clarendon High School for Girls | |
---|---|
Address | |
1A Union Ave, Selborne , | |
Information | |
Type | All-girls public school |
Motto | Fac et Spera Work and Hope |
Established | 1903 |
School district | District 4 |
Principal | Mrs Patrick |
Second Master | Julia Nhawu |
Grades | 8–12 |
Gender | Girls |
Enrollment | 700 |
Campus | Urban Campus |
Houses | Gittins House Hunter House Ketchen House |
Colour(s) | Black Green White |
Nickname | Clarendon |
Rival | Eunice Girls' High School Collegiate Girls' High School |
Accreditation | Eastern Cape Department of Education |
Yearbook | Our yearly magazine |
Website | www |
Clarendon High School for Girls is a public English medium high school for girls situated in the suburb of Selborne of East London in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. It was founded in 1903 as East London Girls' High School, The brother school is Selborne College, It is one of the oldest schools in South Africa.
History
In 1872, Panmure Public School, a co-educational school, was founded by the German immigrant, Heinrich Muller. The boys' section became Selborne College in 1907, whereas the girls' section moved to Park Avenue in 1886 before becoming a separate school for girls from grades 1 to 10 in 1903. It was originally between Muir Street and Oxford Street, on the site currently occupied by Grens Primary but having then just been vacated by an Uitlander Refugee camp. In 1905, a new uniform was introduced, consisting of a navy gym with green and white colours on the blazers and hats. A school hostel was also established that year. In 1937, the upper grades were moved to new premises on the corner of Connaught Avenue and Oxford Street, and the lower grades remained as a separate school. The name "Clarendon" was given to both schools in 1957, after the former Governor-General of South Africa and his wife, the Lord and Lady Clarendon.[1] In 1959, a "Clarendon green" uniform was introduced. In 1964 the school hostel, Connaught House, was destroyed by fire. The new hostel was opened in 1967. The school adopted a non-racial admissions policy in 1991.[2]
Houses
Miss Donald, headmistress from 1925 to 1945, introduced the prefect system in 1933 and in 1934 appointed the first headgirl, Betty Chew, who was later a teacher at the school and coached the first hockey team until the 1980s. She also created the houses, and named them after Marjorie Ketchen (headmistress from 1912 to 1925), Miss Gittins who became Mrs Booty, and Mrs Hunter, a teacher. These ladies donated the inter-house shield which is still competed for.[3]
Academics
Clarendon High School for Girls is the most academic school in East London by matric pass rate in the year.
- 2010 - 100%
- 2011 - 100%
- 2012 - 100%
- 2013 - 100%
- 2014 - 100%
Sport
- Athletics
- Ballet
- Cross country
- Cycling
- Dancing
- Hockey
- Horse riding
- Judo
- Karate
- Netball
- Rowing
- Swimming
- Squash
- Tennis
- Water polo
Notable alumnae
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (September 2018) |
- Joan Harrison, retired South African swimmer who won the 100 m backstroke event at the 1952 Olympics[4]
- Marcelle Keet, waterpolo, hockey[4]
- Candice Forword, hockey[4]
- Lana Marks, fashion designer[citation needed]
See also
References
- ^ Knowledge4Africa Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 August 2007
- ^ Dispatch Online – Clarendon's 100 years of education written by Barbara Hollands, February 24 2003 Archived 3 May 2005 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 August 2007
- ^ Go and Express – An institution and a statement written by Rob Sampson, December 4 2003 Archived 14 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 August 2007
- ^ a b c Go and Express - An institution and a statement written by Rob Sampson, 4 December 2003 Archived 14 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 February 2020