Jump to content

Queen's College, Georgetown

Coordinates: 6°48′51″N 58°09′49″W / 6.8142848°N 58.1637347°W / 6.8142848; -58.1637347
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Inelekt (talk | contribs) at 15:45, 6 April 2010. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Queen's College
Location
Map

Guyana
Queen's College, Georgetown is located in Guyana
Queen's College, Georgetown
Coordinates6°48′51″N 58°09′49″W / 6.8142848°N 58.1637347°W / 6.8142848; -58.1637347
Information
MottoFideles Ubique Utiles
(Faitful and Useful Always.)
Established1844
FounderWilliam Austin Percy
StatusOpen
PrincipalMrs. Freidel Issacs
Genderco-ed
Number of students900
Classes offeredCSEC, CAPE
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Yellow and Black
NicknameQ.C.
National ranking1

Queen's College is the top secondary school in Guyana;Situated at the South-Easterly Junction of Camp Street and Thomas Lands. Alumni can enter the school through the Secondary School Entrance Examination (SSEE) and at the Lower 6th Form Level if the academic performance of the student is satisfactory. The school strives to maintain high standards with emphasis being placed on the all round development of the students.

History

In 1951, a history of the school History of Queen's College was published by Senior Master, N.E. Cameron N.E. Cameron. It was updated and re-published in 2009 by the QC Alumni Association in Toronto Toronto Alumni Association.

Queen's College was established in 1844 as the Queen's College Grammar School for boys by William Percy Austin, D.D., Bishop of the Anglican diocese of then British Guiana. The female equivalent was the Bishops' High School.

The first assembly was held on 5 August 1844 with an enrollment of fifteen boys. Although the school started out as an Anglican Church School, Bishop Austin was interested in making it a more broad-based institution to include non-Anglicans. Its first administration, however, consisted only of members of the Church of England.

Formal classes commenced on 15 August 1844 in the Old Colony House (situated in the compound of what is now the Guyana High Courts, previously known as the Victoria Law Courts). The original fifteen students had two tutors, with Bishop Austin himself becoming the first Principal. In 1845 the school moved to Main and Quamina (then Murray) Streets. Its population was rapidly expanding and, with a student body of seventy and three tutors, another move was made in 1854 to its first formal building at Carmichael and Quamina Streets.

In 1876, the school became a "Colonial Institution" and was renamed "Queen's College." Several additional changes in location took the school to the site of the present Ministry of Health building (Vlissengen Road and Brickdam) in 1918, and then to its present location in Thomas Lands (Camp and Thomas Roads), where the facilities were formally opened on 3 December 1951. The school had a reputation for maintaining a rigorous academic environment with intense competition and graduated students who were eligible for admission to elite public and private universities around the globe, including the Sorbonne, Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard, and London University colleges. The school became co-educational in 1975. This was accomplished by transferring approximately one hundred and fifty girls into the 2nd, 3rd, Upper 5th and Lower 6th forms from the Bishops' High School, which institution was also a single-sex institution. Girls were also admitted into the first form.

1997 Fire

On 16 November 1997, the school was partially destroyed in a fire. The three-story centre block, housing the auditorium, offices and dining hall were destroyed. Damage was estimated at G$200 million (around US$1,000,000). Extensive reconstruction has been carried out, starting six years after the fire. Phase I of the rebuilding - the Administrative Block and Auditorium - has been completed and was dedicated on 19 September 2003.

School houses

The school's traditions included features that were characteristic of an English public school with a head boy and subsequently after co-education, a head girl and prefects picked from students who were determined to have the respect of their peers and to have displayed an appropriate standard of conduct. They provided student leadership. Additionally, students were placed in cross-grade groups called "houses" with a house master or house mistress, who was teacher and a head-of-house, who was a student. The house was essentially a school team. The school's ten houses are named after past Headmasters and masters (teachers), members of the school, members of the British Guiana colonial government, and historical figures significant to the former British Guiana. These ten houses also possess their own colours. The houses are as follow:

A House - Percival (red)
B House - Raleigh (royal blue)
C House - Austin (emerald green)
D House - D'Urban (brown)
E House - Pilgrim (purple)
F House - Weston (light blue)
G House - Moulder (pink)
H House - Wooley (dark green)
K House - Cunningham (yellow)
L House - Nobbs (white; presently gold)

I House - Isaacs (black)(This house however is no longer in existence)

Alumni

Noted alumni include:

Sports

Queen's College is famous for its excellent cricketing skills with the most recent even being a match at the National Stadium versus Berbice High School. Former West Indies Player Roger Harper also attended Queen's College. The school also participates yearly in the Barbados Relay Fair in which they excel.

Recent Achievements

Queen's College has continued to upkeep the tradition of being the best school in the country and the Caribbean.It has produced top performers in the Caribbean on numerous occasions in categories awarded by Caribbean Examination Council; Best Overall Student in the Caribbean, Best Science Student in the Caribbean, Best Business Student in the Caribbean, Best Agricultural Science Student in the Caribbean and Best CAPE Performers


References