- Source: Geelong College
The Geelong College is an Australian independent and co-educational, Christian day and boarding school located in Newtown, an inner-western suburb of Geelong, Victoria.
Established in 1861 by Alexander James Campbell, a Presbyterian minister, the Geelong College was formerly a school of the Presbyterian Church of Australia and is now operated in association with the Uniting Church in Australia but is not governed or managed by the church. The school has a non-selective enrolment policy and currently caters for over 1,200 students from kindergarten to Year 12, including around 100 boarding students from Years 7 to 12. The boarding students are accommodated in two boarding houses at the senior school campus: Mackie House for boys, Mossgiel House for girls.
The college is affiliated with the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia, the Junior School Heads Association of Australia, the Association of Independent Schools of Victoria, the Australian Boarding Schools Association, and has been a member of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria since 1908.
History
Following the closure of the first Geelong Grammar, Campbell established a committee to found a new Presbyterian school. On 8 July 1861, Geelong College was officially established. The school year later started with an enrolment of 62. George Morrison was appointed the first principal and three years later became the owner of the school. The school moved to its present location in 1871. The architects Alexander Davidson and George Henderson designed its main building.
In 1908, the college returned to the ownership of the Presbyterian Church of Australia and became a member of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS). St David's Presbyterian Church at the corner of Talbot St and Aphrasia St, Newtown is currently used by the School for religious services. Traditionally, the school used St George’s Presbyterian Church on Latrobe Terrace for Presbyterian Services. Anglican services, when required, were provided at All Saints Church on Noble St. Presbyterian Services however, were transferred to St David’s Church in 1962. The Geelong College Chapel was dedicated on 8 March 1989 as the centre of the school's spiritual life. It was formerly the school’s House of Music, designed by Philip Hudson, built c. 1936 and opened in 1937.
Land was acquired in 1946 for a new preparatory campus which did not open until 1960. This particular campus became co-educational in 1974, with co-education being extended to the senior campus in 1975. The college undertook an extensive redevelopment and refurbishment of the middle school, which is on the preparatory campus, in 2012.
In 2015 Principal Andrew Barr resigned after he was photographed watching pornography in his office.
Principals
Campuses
Senior School – Years 9 to 12
Talbot Street, Newtown
Middle School – Years 4 to 8
Aberdeen Street, Newtown
Junior School – Kindergarten to Year 3
Minerva Road, Newtown
Cape Otway Campus – all years
Cape Otway (since 2015)
House system
A house system operates at both the senior and middle schools. Each house is named after a significant person in the college's history. Sporting and music competitions are held between them each year.
At the middle school, there are four houses: Pegasus (white), Bellerophon (blue), Minerva (red) and Helicon (green), which meet for sporting events throughout each year. The house model is not used for pastoral care at this campus. The names of these houses originate from Roman mythology.
Curriculum
Geelong College offers its senior students the Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE).
Sport
Secondary students of the college participate in the summer, winter and spring seasons of the Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS)/Associated Grammar Schools of Victoria (AGSV) sport competition. Choices offered for summer sports include badminton, cricket (boys only), softball (girls only), tennis and rowing. Winter sports include Australian rules football (boys only), netball (girls only), soccer and basketball. Students may also participate in a number of local competitions and the college is particularly known for its excellence and achievement in rowing competitions.
= APS and AGSV/APS premierships
=Geelong College has won the following APS and AGSV/APS premierships:
Boys:
Cricket (7) – 1946, 1947, 1963, 1979, 1982, 1995, 2011
Football (6) – 1925, 1927, 1932, 1963, 1964, 2006
Rowing (13) – 1936, 1944, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1976, 1990, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2003
Girls:
Athletics (5) – 1995, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2005
Hockey (2) – 1995, 1996
Netball (4) – 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998
Rowing (10) – 1981, 1982, 1983, 1989, 1992, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2011
Tennis (6) – 1995, 1996, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2005
Geelong College Challenge
The Geelong College Challenge is a competition run by the college at the preparatory school campus in which government schools in the region can enter. The challenge started in 1993. Participating schools send in an entry based on the set theme, and the teams with the 16 best entries are accepted. These schools then form a team of four Year 6 students (two boys and two girls). On the weekend of the challenge, the teams participate in various challenges, which include art, music, drama, technology, information technology, physical education and mathematics challenges.
Notable alumni
Alumni of the school are known as Old Geelong Collegians and may elect to join the alumni association, the Old Geelong Collegians' Association (OGCA). Some notable Old Geelong Collegians include:
= Academic
=Sir Robert Honeycombe – scientist and metallurgist, Emeritus Professor of Metallurgy at Cambridge University, UK.
John Marden – first headmaster of the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney (1888–1919) and Pymble Ladies' College (1916–1919); pioneer of women's education; Presbyterian elder
= Business
=Bill Dix – former managing director of Ford Australia and Chairman of Qantas
Don Kendell – founder of Kendell Airlines
= Entertainment, media and the arts
=Russell Boyd – cinematographer: Picnic at Hanging Rock, Gallipoli, Crocodile Dundee.
John Duigan – film director and writer
Gideon Haigh – journalist and author
Robert Ingpen – artist, writer and illustrator
Rebecca Maddern – journalist
Veronica Milsom – comedian and triple j radio presenter
George Ernest Morrison – Australian adventurer; correspondent for The Times Peking (Beijing)
Guy Pearce – actor
Sean Sowerby – journalist
Nathan Templeton – journalist
= Medicine and science
=Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet – biologist and winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine
= Politics, public service and the law
=Lionel Aingimea – President of Nauru since 2019
John Button – senior Federal Minister in the Hawke and Keating Governments
Sir Arthur Coles – retail founder, MP, Lord Mayor of Melbourne; first Chairman of Australian National Airlines (TAA)
Robert Doyle – Lord Mayor of Melbourne, politician; Member for Malvern in the Legislative Assembly (1992–2006); Leader of the Victorian Opposition (2002–2006)
Major General Sir James Harrison, KCMG, CB, CBE – former Governor of South Australia
Sarah Henderson, MP – Member for Corangamite (Liberal Party) from 2013 to 2019, Senator for Victoria since 2019
Barry James Maddern – Australian barrister and jurist
Fergus Stewart McArthur, MP – Member for Corangamite (Liberal Party) from 1984 to 2007
Sir Gordon Stewart McArthur – Liberal Party politician, President of the Victorian Legislative Council (1958–1965), grazier and barrister
James Nimmo – public servant
= Religion
=Thomas Henry Armstrong – first Bishop of Wangaratta
= Sport
=Tom Atkins – AFL footballer for Geelong
Jaxson Barham – AFL footballer for Collingwood
Alec Boswell Timms – VFA footballer for Geelong and Scottish international rugby union player from 1896 to 1905
Tim Callan – AFL footballer for the Western Bulldogs
Alex Cincotta- AFL footballer for Carlton
David A. Clarke – AFL footballer for Geelong and Carlton
David E. Clarke – AFL footballer for Geelong and Carlton
Georgie Clarke – Olympian (athletics)
Tim Clarke – former AFL footballer for Hawthorn
Richard Colman – Paralympic athletics gold medallist
Ayce Cordy – AFL footballer for the Western Bulldogs
Zaine Cordy – AFL footballer for the Western Bulldogs; premiership player in the 2016 AFL Grand Final
Ed Curnow – current AFL footballer for Carlton
Charlie Curnow – current AFL footballer for Carlton
Josh Dunkley-Smith – 2012 Olympic rowing silver medallist
Edward 'Carji' Greeves – winner of the inaugural Brownlow Medal for the best and fairest player in the Victorian Football League (later known as AFL) (1924)
Lindsay Hassett – captain of the Australian Test cricket team from 1949 to 1953
John "Jack" Bailey Hawkes – Australian tennis champion
Lachlan Henderson – current AFL footballer for Geelong
Steve Horvat – Australian international soccer player
Jack Iverson – Australian Test cricketer
Charlie Lazzaro – AFL footballer for North Melbourne
Bowen Lockwood – AFL footballer for Port Adelaide
Ned McHenry – AFL footballer for Adelaide
Edward Russell Mockridge – dual gold medallist for cycling at the 1952 Summer Olympics
David Ramage – two-time Olympic rower
Ian Redpath – Australian Test cricketer
Josh Saunders – former AFL footballer for St Kilda
Will Schofield – AFL footballer for the West Coast Eagles
Paul Sheahan – Australian Test cricketer; former headmaster of The Geelong College and Melbourne Grammar School
Alex Witherden – AFL footballer for the Brisbane Lions and West Coast Eagles
Mason Wood – AFL footballer for North Melbourne and St Kilda
See also
List of schools in Victoria
List of boarding schools
References
Further reading
Notman, G.C. & Keith, B.R. 1961. The Geelong College 1861–1961. The Geelong College Council, Geelong.
Deakin University. 1979. Portrait of The Geelong College: Continuity and Change in an Independent School. Deakin University, Waurn Ponds, Vic. ISBN 0-86828-009-7.
Penrose, Helen. 2011. The Way to the Stars: 150 Years of The Geelong College. Australian Scholarly Publishing, North Melbourne. ISBN 978-1-921875-10-6.
External links
Official website
Heritage Guide to The Geelong College Archived 28 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine
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