Philip Allfrey · @dr_pda
85 followers · 74 posts · Server hcommons.social

There were four graduates from Auckland College and Grammar School, 3 from St Johns College, and 1 each from Wellington College, Nelson College, and Bishopdale College. The Auckland schools disaffiliated in 1883 with the foundation of Auckland University College.

Conveniently there was a Royal Commission to enquire into the "operations of the University of New Zealand and its relation to the secondary schools of the colony" in 1878, and its interim and final reports provide lots of detail of the workings of the schools in this period.

Interim report: atojs.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/a

Final report: atojs.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/a

The interim report is especially fascinating as it contains transcripts of the interviews undertaken by the Commissioners.

#auckland #historyofeducation #histed #Victorian #royalcommission #universityofnewzealand

Last updated 2 years ago

Philip Allfrey · @dr_pda
85 followers · 73 posts · Server hcommons.social

A quick search showed that NZ's first female graduate, Kate Edger, graduated from Auckland in 1877, so I was at least partly right, but my original reasoning turned out to be a case of adding 2+2 to get 5.

I thought that Auckland College and Grammar School (founded 1869) had split into Auckland Grammar School and Auckland University College (now the University of Auckland), due to the similarity of name and their both being at one time on Symonds St

It turns out that from 1871 secondary schools (if they were capable of teaching at an undergraduate level) could be affiliated to the University of New Zealand. Undergraduates who had kept the required terms at an affiliated school could sit the exams of the University of NZ

#auckland #aucklandgrammar #historyofeducation #histed #Victorian #universityofnewzealand

Last updated 2 years ago