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St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls, Pretoria

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St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls
Address
Map
186 Duxbury Road, Hillcrest

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Coordinates25°45′18″S 28°14′31″E / 25.75500°S 28.24194°E / -25.75500; 28.24194
Information
School typeAll-girls private school
MottoFiliae Regis
(Daughter of King)
Religious affiliation(s)Diocese of Pretoria
DenominationAnglican
Patron saint(s)St Mary
Established8 September 1879; 145 years ago (1879-09-08)
FounderThe Rt Revd Henry Bousfield
Sister schoolSt. Alban's College (Former)
School number012 366 0500
HeadmasterMrs Howard
Exam boardIEB
Staff100 full-time
Grades000–12
GenderFemale
Age3 to 18
Number of students850 girls
LanguageEnglish
Schedule07:30 - 14:10
Hours in school day6h30
CampusUrban Campus
Campus typeSuburban
Houses  St Andrew's
  St David's
  St George's
  St Patrick's
Colour(s)  Blue
  Brown
NicknameSt Mary's
Rivals
School feesR252,000 (boarding)
R161,400 (tuiton)
Alumni Old Girls
Websitewww.stmarys.pta.school.za

St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls is an Anglican private boarding school for girls situated in Hillcrest, Pretoria in the Gauteng province of South Africa, St Mary's DSG was founded in 1879 by the Rt Revd Henry Bousfield, the first Bishop of Pretoria.[1] For 75 years of its existence the school was run by the nuns of the Community of St Mary the Virgin. The brother school is St. Alban's College.

The school was established in 1871 by Henry Bousfield known as St Etheldreda's but it became St Mary's DSG later on. It is known as one of the oldest schools in Pretoria. It is one of the most prestigious schools in South Africa.

History

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St Etheldreda's 1879–1909

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The school was known as St Etheldreda by Bishop Henry Bousfield. It later became St Mary's DSG. Initially it was situated at No. 279 Skinner Street. Later it moved to Hillcrest.

The school had 20 pupils in 1886 and 75 pupils in 1889. The school cost £1,500 of which only £300 was immediately available. By 1895, the rest was raised by the bishop, friends, 138 pupils and nine academic member of staff.

St Mary's DSG establishment

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Henry Bousfield died and all seemed lost. The Headmistress resigned and return to England and 25 pupils remained at St Etheldreda's. The Education Department suggested that the school buildings might be used as a hostel for the newly established girls high school in Arcadia called Pretoria High School for Girls.

When the Bishop William Carter was appointed as second Bishop of Pretoria (1903–1909). He fervently opposed the absorbing of church schools by the government. It was his inspiration that saved our school: he invited the Community of St Mary the Virgin from Wantage in England to take it over and the Community accepted. However, they were not able to send sisters to South Africa until September 1903. For nine months, Miss Grenfell kept the school going. Finally the great day came when the tour Sisters arrived at the Pretoria station in September 1903. A new era dawned during which the school developed into an efficient highly regarded and institution under the capable and loving guidance of Sisters. The name St Etheldreda's was not heard from the war and by the time of the school became St Mary's Diocesan School for Girls also known as the DSG.

The year 2004 gave the school further opportunity to celebrate: 125 years of the best that a holistic education has to offer.

Sports

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ Addison 1979, p. 1.
  • Addison, Betty (1979). Daughters of the king: the story of St. Mary's Diocesan school for girls, Pretoria, 1879–1979. Governing Body of St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls.
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