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St Stithians College

Coordinates:26°5′11″S28°1′1.5″E / 26.08639°S 28.017083°E /-26.08639; 28.017083
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Private & boarding school in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
St Stithians College
St Stithian's badge
Location
Map
40 Peter Place, Lyme Park,Sandton

,
Coordinates26°04′58″S28°01′05″E / 26.08278°S 28.01806°E /-26.08278; 28.01806
Information
School typePrivate &boarding
MottoOne and All
Religious affiliationMethodist Church
Established28 January 1953; 73 years ago (1953-01-28)
Founders
  • Albert Collins
  • Gilbert Tucker
  • William Mountstephens
LocaleSuburban
School number+27 (011) 577-6000
Headmaster
  • Boys' College: Mr David du Toit
  • Girls' College: Dr Sally James
Exam boardIEB
Staff450 full-time
Grades
  • Junior Prep: R-2
  • Boys' Prep: 3-7
  • Girls' Prep: 3-7
  • Boys' College: 8-12
  • Girls' College: 8-12
Age5 to 18
Number of students742 boys & 530 girls
Schedule08:00 - 15:00
CampusUrban Campus
Colours  Blue
  Navy
  Red
  White
Song The College Song
NicknameSaints, The White, College
Rivals
YearbookThe Stythian
School feesR137,020 (boarding)
R186,615 (annual tuition)
Affiliations
AlumniOld Stithians
Websitewww.stithian.com

St Stithians College (colloquially known asSaints) is aprivateMethodistschool situated in the suburb ofLyme Park in the border ofSandton andRandburg in theGauteng province ofSouth Africa. Founded in 1953 by Albert Collins, William Mountstephens and Gilbert Tucker, it has consistently ranked amongst the top performing independent schools in South Africa. It follows a co-ordinate educational model within a village of schools consisting of boys' and girls' colleges, boys' and girls' preparatory schools, and a junior preparatory. It is built on a 100 hectare estate, one of the largest school campuses in the country.

The College is organized into six schools on its main campus in Johannesburg and maintains facilities at the Kamoka Bush School nearModimolle and the virtual St Stithians Online School. As aMethodist school, it has ties toKearsney College,Epworth High School,Penryn College andKingswood College.

The Boys' and the Girls' Colleges are members of theRound Square Conference of Schools andG30 Schools Conference.

St Stithians College is also the host of the annual Saints Sports Festival which is the largest and longest continuous school sports festival in the world. The 2017 edition witnessed over 1,400 participants in 8 fields of sport, 200 fixtures and over 50,000 spectators.

History

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The Boys' College

[edit]

The idea of setting up aMethodist school inJohannesburg came to Gilbert Tucker, who wanted to base it on the pattern of his old school,Kingswood College inGrahamstown. The Methodist accountant did not have the money so he turned to people who would be interested in financing it.

He met two Cornishmen, both born in 1859, Albert Collins and William Mountstephens, who were Methodists and promising new businessmen who had started to make a name for themselves in their new country.

Collins, who never married, died first and this led to the creation of the Trust for building the Methodist school Tucker had dreamt of. The Trust was formally opened in April 1941 and, at Mountstephens' suggestion, was named after Collins' birthplace,Stithians, a village inCornwall.

These trustees were D.F. Corlett, C.H. Leake, J.B. Webb and G.K. Tucker.

The Trust was able to purchase a piece of land, which was part of the farmDriefontein (one of the "fonteins" can be found on the grounds) for an amount of £8713 in 1943 but nothing further was achieved until after the War. At first it was thought that building costs might drop and so the trustees waited until it became obvious that prices would not drop and so the decision to build was made in 1951.

Mountstephens lived to see the land purchased, but not the school built; his widow on the other hand, was to take an active interest in the school until her death. The school was to have been a secondary school only and at first, the debate on co-education was open. Circumstances were to make decisions for the Trustees: the area was new and remote; its people wanted a boys' school and a preparatory school as well as a secondary school.

The first classes began on 28 January 1953, with Grades 1 and 2, and 8 and 9. On 3 February 1953 there was a formal opening ceremony. W.G.A. (Wally) Mears, formerly ofRondebosch Boys' High School, was the first headmaster, and taught English, Latin, History and Geography to the high school classes, with Mr E.M. Harris teaching Maths, Science and Scripture, and Mr Minnaar teaching Afrikaans. In the second year (1954) classes in the school ran from Grade 1 to Grade 10, and in 1956 the first group wrote the matriculation examination. As the school grew, Wally Mears, the headmaster, did less teaching, and became more an administrator. The school's hall is named for him.

The Girls College

[edit]

St Stithians Girls College was opened in 1995 to form the coordinate module with the Boys College. The founding headmistress was Mrs Anne Van Zyl. The initial opening classes were grade 0 - 3 which was to expand rapidly to include all the grades up to and including grade 11 with the first grade 12 class being inducted in 1997. The Girls College was originally named the St Stithians Girls Collegiate, which would subsequently be changed when expanded. During 1994 the first classes would be held on the boys 'side of the rugby field' using already available infrastructure. As a part of the co-ordination module girls and boys school often have mixed classes in Drama, English, isiZulu, Afrikaans, Art and Computer Science. In 1996 the Collegiate would move across the field to newly developed complete school. The College facilities was further developed to include a large library, several computer rooms, a 'tuck shop' and gymnasium as well as a lecture theatre - used for assemblies and individual class plays. The first Matriculents of the college would sit their exams 1997.

In 1999 the founding houses of the Girls College were chosen. They were all named after towns within Cornwall, linking the college to its fore bearers. The girls were then to pick a name out of a hat to randomly divide the grades into the four houses. The names of the houses are Cambourne, Kenwyn, Stratton and Trewen respectively. These individual houses compete in various cultural and sporting house competitions as well as part take in different philanthropic endeavours. The uniform has changed over the years, with initially the girls wearing white floral dresses - which the girls prep still use as a summer uniform - to a Blue and red checked skirt and white blouse. The first top was a white golf shirt but this was changed to a white blouse in 2008.

The Badge

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The Badge is based on the coat of arms of theDuke of Cornwall, which is a Crusader shield on which are displayed 15 goldenBezants in the shape of a triangle with the motto 'One and All'. The story of the 15 bezants occurs during the Crusades when the Duke of Cornwall was captured by theSaracens. A ransom of 15 bezants was set up. All the people of Cornwall contributed to raise the money for the ransom. It was paid and the Duke was set free. The inhabitants had all helped together One and All to raise the money – hence the motto.

The founders decided that the shield would have to be modified to suit the school, as a new badge. It was then decided that it should have a dark blue border along the outside edge of the shield with 15 gold bezants arranged equally along either side on the blue border. On the inside would be a silver shield on which the red cross stands out boldly to signify the Christian foundation of the college.

House system

[edit]

St Stithians College has a house system. Each house competes against each other in interhouse events to win the Harris Cup (Boys' College) at the end of the year. St Stithian's Boys' College has 10 houses, St Stithians Girls' College has 6, formerly 4.

Academics

[edit]

The colleges write theIndependent Examinations Board exams.

IEB Results1999200020012002200320042005200620072008[1]2009[1]2010[1]2011[1]2012[1]2013[1]
Number of candidates200239217240232236229239242251
Number of failures1012570016
University endorsement (%)98969797949590
A aggregates (%)50333226
A-B-C aggregates (%)87
Subject distinctions239251306352323366321348312328393385511394
Subject distinctions (%)18.518.722.521.125.319.1
Number in top 50727315
Bachelor's degree209216205217232245
Bachelor's degree (%)90.191.589.590.895.997.6
Diploma, higher certificate2220242196
Diploma, higher certificate (%)9.58.510.58.83.72.4
Did not qualify100110
Did not qualify (%)0.40.00.00.40.40.0
Total all levels168717531747182220172068

Sports

[edit]

St Stithians Boys' College

[edit]

The sports that are played at the school are:

St Stithians Girls' College

[edit]

The sports that are played at the school are:

Notable alumni from Boys' & Girls' College

[edit]
See also:Category:Alumni of St Stithians College
This list of alumnimay not follow Wikipedia'sverifiability policy. Please helpimprove it by addingreliable sources for existing names which prove they are alumni. Unsourced names may be challenged and removed.(December 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Cricket

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Golf

[edit]

Rugby

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Powerlifting and athletics

[edit]

Rowing

[edit]

Swimming

[edit]
  • Jean Basson (class of 2005) South African professional swimmer

Tennis

[edit]
  • Kevin Anderson (class of 2004) South African professional tennis player

Water polo

[edit]

Other sports

[edit]

Politics

[edit]

Theatre, film, broadcasting and acting

[edit]
  • Gavin Hood, (class of 1981) filmmaker, screenwriter, producer, and actor

Music

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefMatric Results[permanent dead link]
  2. ^"Kagiso Rabada visits the Boys' College".www.stithian.com. Retrieved21 August 2022.
  3. ^"Old Stithian Newsletter - November 2017".Old Stithian Association. Retrieved25 September 2022.
  4. ^"Holly Norton - World Champion Rower shares her journey".www.stithian.com. Retrieved25 September 2022.
  5. ^"Provincial Hockey".www.stithian.com. Retrieved21 August 2022.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Mears, W. G. A., comp. (1972)The Early History of St Stithians College. Randburg: Council of St Stithians College
  • Pauline Dickson (gardener at St Stithians for over 36 years),A Gardener's Legacy
  • Water MacFarlane (previous staff member)To Serve the Future Hour

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