School history
A view of the history of Onslow College
Onslow opened on a bare windswept hill in the suburbs as a new co-ed secondary school in 1956 in response to the population pressures of the baby boom which was then at its height. (The future Newlands College was then a gorse covered hillside and the Raroa Intermediate site was the local tip). It was poorly served by public transport and the few people who lived nearby mainly lived in railway or state houses. But the northern suburbs were rapidly expanding and the intention was that this school would take some of the pressure off before further secondary schools would be built in Karori and possibly eventually in the brand new suburb of Newlands.
However, right from the beginning there was some sense of an ‘Onslow Way’ and students chose to attend the school from further away than the immediate suburbs even though the trip could be quite lengthy. The attractions were co-ed, fresh attitudes, lots of space and a broad curriculum (at that time Wellington High, the other Wellington co-ed was still a technical school and Wellington Girls’ and Wellington College were very traditional). It seems that many staff also reflected this fresh approach. The muddy windswept hillside and school motto helped develop sense of difference (Levavi oculos meos in montes – I lift my eyes to the hills or ‘high expectations’). There was soon a tramping club, sports and cultural teams and school leavers making their mark in the world.
In the 60s the school grew to 1100 and many students participated in the world-wide ferment of change. The Secondary School Students Association was started mainly by Onslow students in the late 1960s (for student educational rights and eventuated in the student-centred philosophy the school has now). They marched on parliament, met the Minister of Education and featured on television and other media. Opposition to corporal punishment and the Vietnam War were also hot topics at Onslow. About this time prize giving and prefects were abolished due to student pressure. Direct action for change (such as sit-ins) was a feature of the school. Prize giving was seen as elitist with the money better spent on library books, and the prefect system anti-democratic and unegalitarian. Onslow became one of first to have a student council (also a woman as chair of the Board of Trustees). A battle to get rid of uniforms took several years from the late 60s to early 70s and was successful in stages with hats and gloves the first to go. Reasons included the demeaning hair and hem length checks, waste of staff time and underlying conformity of uniforms.
Onslow has continued to foster responsible, independent learners and this is reflected in the current school vision: ‘We will be satisfied when all students are challenged to achieve personal standards of excellence in an environment that encourages individual responsibility, freedom of expression and respect for the rights of others’.
Onslow College is named for Lord William Hillier Onslow (1853-1911) Governor of New Zealand from 1889-1892. A few months after the family settled in Government House their small son Cranley caught typhoid and although he survived, the Onslows view of Wellington was blighted and they left their post early due to distrust of the city's poor sanitation. However, to placate them, their family name was given to a new borough formed in the northern suburbs in 1890. Red and green were apparently the official colours of the Onslow family and official permission was required for the development of the Onslow College coat of arms. Incidentally, the longest serving Mayor of Onslow borough, before its amalgamation with Wellington City in 1919, was a black American singer Robert Bradford Williams who first visited New Zealand in the 1880s with a singing troup and later set up as a barrister on Lambton Quay before serving 5 terms as Onslow borough mayor. see also www.dnzb.govt.nz Contributions to this history site are welcomed. Please send stories, memories, anecdotes,reminiscences and news of former students and staff of Onslow College to Hilary Stace at stacefamily@actrix.co.nz or c/ Onslow College, Private Bag 13-906, Johnsonville, Wellington
News
EARLY CLOSING - 24 March 2010
The school has been advised by PPTA that, in accordance with the terms of clause s.26 of the Employment Relations Act 2000, a Paid Union Meeting will be held at 1:30pm on March 24. This means that school will close at 12:20pm. Buses will run at this earlier time. Please advise us (info@onslow.school.nz) if you wish for your child to be supervised at school for the afternoon.
Congratulations to...
- Eleanor Pepperell - selected to represent the Wellington Juniors Track Cycling Team in the National Junior Competition to be held in Invercargill in early March.
- Andy Weston - selected for the Under 15 Wellington Cricket Representative team who participated in the National Tournament during the holidays.
- Ryan Dannhauser - selected for the Under 19 Wellington Cricket Representative team who participated in the National Tournament during the holidays.
- Niki Zivkovic - selected for the Under 16 Wellington Cricket Representative team who will be touring India in April/May this year.
- Tufi Sele & Joe Wright (ex-students) - Tufi was selected to trial for the NZ Elite and U23 rowing squads. Joe was selected to trial for the NZ U19 (Juniors). Tufi and Joe were part of the Central Region High Performance U21 Coxed Quad crew that won gold in the U21 event at the National Rowing Champs.
- Rowan Barrie (ex-student) - awarded an Engineering Scholarship to study in Germany as part of the 'EU-NZ Mobility Project'. Rowan will study electronic & computer systems engineering at Rostock University, north of Germany from October to March next year.
- Will Rivett, Brodie Smith, Cameron Forest, Johnathan Doogan, Terina Ngata, Sarah Ellis, Brittany McLeod - vounteered for the Heart Foundation in February by serving as Marshalls for Round the Bays. This involved a very early start on a Sunday morning. The students got an insight into the organisation behind a large event while assisting the Heart Foundation to raise funds. The Heart Foundation is a charity and relies on raised funds to operate.
Farewell to Doc Martin
It is with regret that the Board of Trustees has received the resignation of Dr Stuart Martin, our Principal since 2001. Stuart began 12-months of sabbatical and leave last year and was due to return to the school late in May. For the last nine...
Read more »Congratulations...
...to Sonja Hempel, Year 13 2009, on being Top Scholar in New Zealand for Geography.While Sonja Hempel gained a scholarship in English, it was her Geography result which really stood out. Her mark which gained her an Outstanding Scholarship was the h...
Read more »Host Families Needed!
Our International Department is looking for host families that may be interested in hosting German or Brazilian students. We would like to increase our host family data base as there will be a new intake of students in July. There is also ...
Read more »PTA AGM - 15 March 2010
The AGM of the Onslow College PTA will be held on Monday 15 March 2010 at 7.30pm in the College Library. Notice is hereby given of the intention to amend the Constitution of the Association, specifically that the quorum number required for the Onslow...
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