Napier Girls' High School Explained

Napier Girls' High School
Motto:Ad Lucem
"Towards the Light"
Type:State, Girls, Secondary with boarding facilities
Established:1884
Address:Clyde Road
Napier 4110
New Zealand
Coordinates:-39.4857°N 176.9145°W
Principal:Dawn Ackroyd
Roll:
Decile:6N[1]
Moe:217

Napier Girls' High School is a state secondary school on Clyde Road, Napier, New Zealand. It is one of the oldest schools in New Zealand for girls, and has a current school roll of about 1000.[2]

History

In July 1883 plans were submitted to the board of governors for a school for girls in Napier, and the following month the board advertised for a lady principal who would be required to teach English, Latin, French and mathematics and take charge of the boarding establishment.[3] Mary Hewett was appointed, and the school opened on 29 January 1884. The original school course included English, French, Latin, German, drawing, singing and calisthenics. 39 pupils were on the books that first day, and one boarder was enrolled.[4]

The original school building had classrooms on the ground floor, and rooms for the boarders upstairs. It stood where the main hostel building, Hewett House, now stands. It was badly damaged in the 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake, and had to be demolished. The main building of the present school, named Spencer Building after A.E.J. Spencer, the school's third principal, stands in what was the original playing area of the first school. After bad damage, Napier Technical College was disestablished by the minister of education and was almalgamated into Napier Girls' High School and Napier Boys' High School.[5] The entrance to the school hall features a large mural painting by renowned New Zealand artist, Rita Angus.[6] [7]

Hewett House provides boarding accommodation for 160 boarders adjacent to the school, including five day and seven day stay. The girls are housed in double cubicles or dormitories, and some have single rooms. Matthews House accommodation opened in 1988, and contains single cubicles for senior girls.

Notable alumnae

Notable faculty

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Decile Change 2014 to 2015 for State & State Integrated Schools . Ministry of Education . 12 February 2015.
  2. Web site: Napier Girls' High School Education Review Office . 2022-03-30 . ero.govt.nz.
  3. Web site: Taonga . New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu . Hewett, Mary Elizabeth Grenside . 2022-03-30 . teara.govt.nz . en.
  4. Web site: Napier Girls High School . 2022-03-30 . www.nghs.school.nz.
  5. Web site: 1 May 2014 . H B Heritage News . 31 March 2024 . historicplacesaotearoa.govt.nz.
  6. Web site: Angus . Rita . Taonga . New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu . 'Study for memorial mural', 1960 . 2022-03-30 . teara.govt.nz . en.
  7. Web site: Architects (www.nzia.co.nz) . NZ Institute of . Napier Girls' High School – New Hall Entrance . 2022-03-30 . NZ Institute of Architects (www.nzia.co.nz).
  8. News: Johnson . Robert . 14 June 2012 . Young bowler is queen of the green . The Dominion Post . 28 July 2014.
  9. Web site: Another accolade for 'tech geek' . 2023-04-07 . NZ Herald . en-NZ.
  10. Web site: Rowing: Emma Twigg's powered to dig deep for gold . 2022-03-30 . NZ Herald . en-NZ.
  11. Book: Creese, Mary R. S . South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian women in science: nineteenth and early twentieth centuries ; a survey of their contributions . 2010 . Scarecrow Press . 978-0-8108-7288-2 . Lanham, Md. . English . 699866310.
  12. Web site: June Clifford, Napier, CNZM The Governor-General of New Zealand . 2022-03-30 . gg.govt.nz . en.