Home page reunion tour of the school

Purpose

This page is to document the school tour undertaken by a few members of the 1969 Grade 12 cohort.


The main etrance – little changed in the buildings but a much more developed garden. When we arrived in 1965 it was all bare red clay.



The bulding where Grade 9 class rooms were the science block in the background.



The wing where we started in Grade 8. The library building was not there when we were at school.



Looking towards the oval from where the principal's office was. It is now a meeting room. The assembly building on the left was not there when we were. The pool was there for our last year.



Looking towards the tuck shop. The quadrangle was all bitumen when we were there. The assemblies were held there up to Grade 10.



The 'boys' near our Grade 10 class room.



The bag racks in front of class rooms. The wing where we wrer in Grade 8 looking towards the new library.



The Commonwealth Science Block where we had physics, chemistry and biology clases in Grade 11 and 12.



The Commonwealth Science Block where we had physics, chemistry and biology clases in Grade 11 and 12.



Inside the new Grade 7 wing.



The wing where we had our clase rooms in Grade 11 and 12.



The special needs students' block.



The gym.



The gym.



The oval looking much more green than when we were running around it.



The pool with some new change rooms.



The performing arts block.



The performing arts block.



Inside the assembly hall.



Boys Vice-Captain and Captain in 1969 with the current Captains.



Geoff Major the current principal addressing the assembly.



A page of the corporal punishment register. One of our contemporaies Robbie Rahmann appears in the register getting caned on the hands.



The prefects and captains register – Boys 1969.



The prefects and captains register – Girls 1969.



A woodwork room. Ear and eye proctection was certainly not there when we were at school.



A woodwork room. Ear and eye proctection was certainly not there when we were at school.



A metal work room. Ear and eye proctection was certainly not there when we were at school. Moreover, we certainly had no girls in any of our 'manual' arts classes!