St Mary's School, Waverley

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St Mary's School, Waverley
Address
55 Athol Street, Waverley

,
2090

Information
TypePrivate & Boarding
MottoLatin: Candida Rectaque
(Fair, and straight)
Religious affiliation(s)Christianity
Established1888; 133 years ago (1888)
LocaleSuburban
Sister schoolSt John's College, Johannesburg
School districtDistrict 4
School number011 531 1800
HeadmistressMs Deanne King
Exam boardIEB
Grades000–12
GenderFemale
Age3 to 18
Number of students1,057 girls
LanguageEnglish
Schedule07:30 - 14:00
CampusUrban Campus
Houses  Clayton
  Furse
  Karney
  Phelps
Colour(s)  Blue
  Red
  White
RivalJeppe High School for Girls
Kingsmead College
St. Andrew's School for Girls
AlumniOld Girls
School feesR 232,600 p.a. (boarding termly)
R 112 450 p.a. (tuition Form V)
Websitewww.stmaryschool.co.za

St Mary's School is a private English medium, Anglican and boarding school for girls situated in the suburb of Waverley in Johannesburg in the Gauteng province of South Africa, it is one of the top and most academic schools in Gauteng.

Established in 1888, it is the oldest school in Johannesburg. It was founded by the Anglican clergyman the Rev. John T. Darragh, who also founded its brother school St John's College, Johannesburg in Houghton ten years later in 1898.[citation needed]

St Mary's School writes the Independent Examinations Board exams.

Alumnae and Old Girls[]

Houses[]

St Mary's consists of four houses, each with a different colour, which compete in inter-house events such as hockey, tennis, swimming, athletics, squash, music, debating and theatre.

Junior school houses[]

  • Hares (Yellow)
  • Zebras (Red)
  • Springboks (Green)
  • Lions (Blue)

Pupils in grade 0 are placed in houses in the first term and stay throughout until grade 7

High school houses[]

  • Clayton (Yellow)
  • Furse (Red)
  • Karney (Green)
  • Phelps (Blue)

The house system was introduced in 1934 and students wear their house badges on their blazers with pride. The houses are named after bishops of Johannesburg; Geoffrey Clayton 1934-1949 and Arthur Karney 1922-1933; bishop of Pretoria, Michael Furse 1909–1920 and archbishop of Cape Town, Francis Phelps 1931–1938.[citation needed]

See also[]

Coordinates: 26°08′30″S 28°04′41″E / 26.14154°S 28.07802°E / -26.14154; 28.07802

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