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Newcastle High School was formally established in 1929. Over time it has undergone significant phases of transformation to reflect and serve the needs of its community. This ability to adapt and evolve whilst retaining our core values is fundamental to our success. Indeed, they are also the vital qualities we nurture in our students. |
However, the genesis of Newcastle High actually begins much earlier than 1929. In 1816 Henry Wrensford, a schoolmaster and pardoned convict, established a school for 8 convict girls and 9 convict boys aged from 3 to 13 years old. At that time Newcastle had about 400 people with 38 children.
The school started in a slab hut near Watt & Bolton Streets under colonial government oversight. When Christ Church Cathedral was completed in 1818 the school moved to a vestry of the church and soon acquired the name ‘Christ Church School’.
Anglican Church
In 1826 it came under Anglican Church control and in 1830, due to overcrowding, moved to a new site on the corner of Church & Boltons streets. But some parents still wanted a government run school, so a new school called Newcastle Public School was opened in Brown Street in 1859 in the basement of the Congregational Church – later moving to a classroom opposite the current Newcastle East Public School (NEPS) in Tyrell Street.
Newcastle Public School
In 1878 the foundation stone for an impressive new schoolhouse for Newcastle Public School (the current main historic building of NEPS) was laid near the top of Tyrell Street – it was often referred to as the School on the Hill. At the rear of the school cattle grazed on the grassed valley that sloped away to Darby Street.
Oldest School Site
This magnificent building, costing 10,000 pounds, had rooms for boys, girls, infants and babies – made of brick with a stone cellar it also featured a Gothic pitched roof of corrugated iron. It soon had over 800 pupils enrolled and is the oldest school site of continuous operation in Australia, having enrolled students every year since 1816.
Newcastle East Public School
The success of Newcastle Public School led the government to take back the church school in 1883, still located on the corner of Church and Bolton streets, and rename it Newcastle East Public School.
Hill High School
In 1906 the most western classroom of Newcastle Public School was established as the Hill High School. It was Newcastle’s only high school and was co-educational and academically selective, until this time students took the train to Maitland to attend high school.
“Caesar” Smith
In 1911 Newcastle Public School closed but the high school featured more than 300 students in 1912. On Tuesday 5 June 1906 it began with its first Principal Charles Rattray Smith, who was nicknamed Caesar due to his love of Latin.
But it was an inauspicious start, the new high school was comprised of just three classrooms – which had tables but no chairs, no chalk, no blackboards, no maps and no other supplies. But Caesar did bring a fierce commitment to service toward school, community, sport, debating, acting and building a robust esprit de corps.
The Novocastrian
Pride in the school, its red and blue, its uniform and civil behaviour was the overriding duty of every school prefect. In 1912 the first issue of the school’s magazine, The Novocastrian, was published.
‘The Hill’ school, was highly valued by the community and it rapidly outgrew its premises. Between 1911 and 1931 Newcastle’s population almost doubled from 55,000 to 104,000.
Separate buildings for boys and girls
The NSW Minister for Public Instruction in his 1925 annual report, noted that: ‘The needs of Newcastle are of such a character that it has become necessary to provide separate buildings for boys and girls instead of utilising one building for both sexes.’
Newcastle Girls’ High School
In 1929, with nearly 600 students enrolled, the Hill High School was split into Newcastle Girls’ High School which moved into the impressive new school building on Parkway Avenue Hamilton South and Newcastle High School which remained at Tyrell Street, both were an academically selective. The Girls High had seventeen classrooms and other specialist areas, as well as an assembly hall for 545 people, a library and a gymnasium.
But for the boys on The Hill, the old school buildings were widely considered inadequate, unsound and unhealthy. Increasing enrolments, exacerbated by the Depression, when many parents kept their boys at school, were too great for the old premises to accommodate.
In 1929 the total enrolment of Newcastle High School was 565, crammed into buildings designed for 300 pupils. The local community pressed the NSW Government to build the boys a new school on land next to the girls high school.
Newcastle Boys’ High Shool at Waratah
But despite the previous success of co-educational schools others argued that it should be located away from the girls, and with it appears Minister Drummond’s support the less central site at Waratah was selected. But more than this, as pointed out by an editorial in The Newcastle Morning Herald, it was high time that Newcastle had two modern, well resourced high schools.