Durban High School

Durban High School (D.H.S.)
Location
Durban High School (D.H.S.)
125 St. Thomas Road
Durban, Kwa-Zulu Natal
South Africa
Coordinates 29°50′40″S 30°59′52″E / 29.84444°S 30.99778°E / -29.84444; 30.99778
Information
Type All-Boys Public School (state)
Motto Deo Fretus
(In God We Trust)
Established 1866
Locale Urban
Head Master Mr Leon Erasmus
Grades 8–12
Number of students 1000
Houses Swales, Grice, Langley, Campbell and Payne and Blackmore
School colour(s) Navy blue and Oxford gold
Newspaper The Herald
Boarding houses Blackmore
Website www.durbanhighschool.co.za

Durban High School is an all-boys public school in Durban, South Africa.

DHS opened its doors in 1866 in two rooms and with seven pupils in Smith Street. From there it moved to a disused granary in Cato Square in 1880, just after the Zulu War, and then to the Old Hospital on the foreshore. In 1895, it moved up onto the healthier Berea to its present site, where it flourished. The ten acres plot was granted to the School by the Durban Town Council. The first enrolled student was a boy called Eben Coates and he was also the first Head-boy. There is also a related primary school: Durban Preparatory High School. The school has approximately 1000 enrolled students, all boys, and includes a small boarding establishment and over 75 teachers. The headmaster is Mr. Leon Erasmus. It is the oldest standing school in Durban and one of the oldest in South Africa.

Houses

There are six houses:

Blackmore House is a home for over 140 boys. The boys' needs are catered for by food provision and dormitories with a maximum of 6 boys per dorm. The boys can go home most weekends and return on Monday mornings.

Sports

A wide range of sports and activities are offered including climbing, golf, fishing, surfing, chess, football, basketball, and hardball as well as the more traditional athletics, cricket, hockey, and rugby which have been played at the school for over 100 years. The school has produced over 125 international sportsmen in sports ranging from rugby and cricket to golf, badminton, baseball, surfing and powerlifting. Countries represented include France, New Zealand, England, Scotland and the USA. More than 30 old boys have played international cricket, six of whom were Wisden Cricketers of the Year. Five old boys played in the 1960 Lords test against England and four in the first two tests against Australia in 1969/70.

Notable people


Staff

Alumni

Politics

Academics

Business

Past presidents of NUSAS

Military

Arts and media

Sports

Cricket

All represented South Africa except where noted:[lower-alpha 1]

Rugby
Athletics
Surfing, swimming, lifesaving and canoeing
Golf
Tennis
Hockey

Notes and references

  1. Over 200 old boys have played provincial cricket in South Africa or county cricket in England.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 All five played in the Lords test match in 1960. Richards, Goddard, Irvine and Gamsy all played in the first two tests against Australia in 1969/70.
  1. {{Cite web
    • Lt.Col A C Martin MC, Headmaster 1943-1952(German prisoner of war during the first two years of his appointment).
    Bill Payne-South Africa Rugby. Taught at the school from 1915-1953. Bill fought in both World Wars and was awarded the Military Medal in 1941, aged 47, while in action in the Western Desert.
    • Col A C Martin Headmaster. German prisoner of war for first two years of his appointment.
    • Bill Payne, Springbok rugby. Bill taught at the school from 1915-1953. Bill fought in both World Wars and was awarded the Military Medal while serving in the Western Desert in 1943.
    | title =NATAL SCHOOLS RUGBY OVERVIEW | author = | work =Schools Rugby Tribune | date = | accessdate =2015-05-27 | url =http://schoolstribune.com/kwazulunatal-overview-p159-129.htm | language = | quote = }}
  2. "Sir Albert Robinson". The Telegraph. 12 March 2009. Retrieved 2015-05-27.
  3. "Radclyffe Cadman.". The Telegraph. 10 November 2011. Retrieved 2015-05-27.

External links

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