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King's Edgehill School

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Established
  
1788

Grades
  
6–12

Phone
  
+1 902-798-2278

Founded
  
1788

Color
  
Red and Blue

Headmaster
  
Joseph F. Seagram

Website
  
www.kes.ns.ca

Founder
  
Charles Inglis

Motto
  
Be More!

King's-Edgehill School

Type
  
Independent Co-educational Secondary

Number of students
  
280-300 (Approx. 170 Boarders, 110 Day Students)

Address
  
33 Kings Edgehill Ln, Windsor, NS B0N 2T0, Canada

Similar
  
Avon View High School, Horton High School, Landmark East School, Dr Arthur Hines Elementa, Windsor Adult High School

Profiles

Welcome to king s edgehill school


King's-Edgehill School is a Canadian private university-preparatory boarding and day school located in the town of Windsor, Nova Scotia. It is the oldest independent school in the Commonwealth outside the United Kingdom, founded by United Empire Loyalists as King's Collegiate School in 1788, and granted Royal Charter by King George III in 1802.

Contents

Academics at king s edgehill school


History

The agricultural town of Windsor was chosen by Charles Inglis, first overseas Bishop of the Anglican Church, for the founding of the school over the larger military centre and colonial capital of Halifax (60 km to the southeast) so "...that it be well away from taverns and houses of ill fame".

In April 1789, King George III gave Royal Assent to the establishment of King's Collegiate School, as well as to the establishment of the University of King's College - the first such honour to be bestowed upon any school in the British Empire. It is also claimed that Prince Edward, Duke of Kent took an interest in King's Collegiate School and University of King's College while stationed in Halifax as Commander-in-Chief, British North America.

In June 1890, the Anglican Diocese of Nova Scotia decided to establish a girls' school in Windsor to complement King's Collegiate School. Edgehill School opened in January 1891 and construction of a new building to house the new girls began in the following June.

In 1920 a disastrous fire swept through the campus causing irreparable damage to the main university buildings. With the encouragement of the Carnegie Foundation, which was promoting the consolidation of all Nova Scotian post-secondary institutions to Halifax around a nucleus formed by Dalhousie University, the University of King's College received funds to move into a newly built campus in Halifax. King's College remains an independent university, although its students enjoy affiliation privileges with Dalhousie. Its campus is located at the corner of Oxford Street and Cobourg Road, occupying the northwest corner of Dalhousie's Studley Campus.

In 1923, the former King's College campus in Windsor was designated a National Historic Site of Canada, as it was the original site of the oldest university in the colonies which became Canada.

During the Second World War, the Edgehill School was host to a group of approximately 30 female students from the Roedean School in East Sussex, England who had been evacuated. They travelled to Nova Scotia on the SS Duchess of Atholl.

Both King's Collegiate School and the newer Edgehill School remained on the Windsor campus and eventually expanded to include much of the 65-acre (260,000 m2) site, therefore better hosting the athletic tournaments which take place every year. In 1976 the governing bodies of both schools decided to amalgamate, and King's-Edgehill School was born.

KCS/King-Edgehill Timeline

  • 1787 - Dr. Charles Inglis arrives in Nova Scotia
  • 1788 - King's Collegiate School for boys opens with 17 students
  • 1789 - George III gives Royal Assent to K.C.S.
  • 1794 - The Academy moved into the unfinished College buildings, which had begun its construction in 1790
  • 1800 - The boys of K.C.S. adopt the game of hurley to the ice of Long Pond
  • 1817 - Construction of The Academy building was begun, the story being that of the eight thousand pounds spent to build this stone building, three thousand is said to have come from the Arms Duty Fund raised in Castine, Maine, during the War of 1812; it was ready for use in 1822
  • 1863 - Convocation Hall is built, Canada's first library museum building
  • 1867 - Canadian Confederation: Among the Fathers of Confederation are 3 former K.C.S. students
  • 1871 - Fire destroyed The Academy
  • 1877 - The boys’ school moved into a new wooden building constructed on the site of the stone building and was designated King’s Collegiate School
  • 1877 - Hensley Memorial Chapel opens on the first Sunday of Michaelmas Term
  • 1891 - Edgehill School for Girls opens with 27 resident and 15 day students
  • 1915 - the School changed its name to King's College School
  • 1920 - Disastrous fire destroys the main buildings of the University of King's College
  • 1923 - The school and the university separate; King's College moves to Halifax
  • 1931 - Inglis House is erected on the foundation of the original 1790 College building
  • 1976 - Amalgamation to form King's-Edgehill School
  • 1981 - King's-Edgehill offers the International Baccalaureate Programme, the sixth school in Canada to do so
  • Present day

    In the past five years. there have been major renovations of the school, ranging from the addition of a floor to the girls dormitory to the construction of the Ted Canavan Athletic Centre (opened in 2005), complete with a pool, double gym and well-equipped exercise facilities. The Fountain Performing Arts Centre was also completed recently to host musical performances and concerts.

    The current headmaster is Joseph F. Seagram. His predecessor is David Penaluna, who is also former headmaster (1995-2008) of St. Michael's University School in Victoria, British Columbia.[1]

    Teachers

  • Sir Charles G. D. Roberts
  • Steven Holmes
  • Steven Laffoley
  • Students

  • Amor De Cosmos
  • Robert B. Dickey
  • John Hamilton Gray (New Brunswick politician)
  • John Pyror
  • Edward Ross
  • Robert Christie (Quebec Politician)
  • Basil King
  • Percy Paris
  • Frederick E. Hyndman
  • Peter Whalley
  • Leopold Davis Lewis
  • Gordon Tidman
  • Muriel Denison
  • James Gilbert
  • Ruth Archibald
  • David Andrews (ice_hockey)
  • Gudie Hutchings
  • Dorothy Harley Eber
  • Fred Fountain
  • Joan Fraser
  • Evan Xie
  • References

    King's-Edgehill School Wikipedia