Otago Boys' High School
Otago Boys' High School is one of New Zealand's oldest boys' secondary schools, located in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand. Originally known as Dunedin High School, it was founded on 3 August 1863 and moved to its present site in 1885. The main building was designed by Robert Lawson and is regarded as one of the finest Gothic revival structures in the country. Situated on high ground above central Dunedin it commands excellent views of the city and is a prominent landmark.
Otago Girls' High School now occupies the original site in Tennyson Street, closer to the centre of the city and is Otago Boys' sister school.
The school owns a lodge in Mount Aspiring National Park, and has regular field trips for students.
Building history
The school opened on its present site in Arthur Street in 1885. The Main Tower Block was designed by R A Lawson and built for 14,800 pounds in blue stone, Port Chalmers breccia and Oamaru stone by W A Carlton. It has long been regarded as a fine design and is listed as a Category I Historic Place.Increasing roll numbers from 1903 led to the opening of the Shand Building in 1914, designed by Edmund Anscombe. He was also responsible for the Rectory, 1913, the principal's onsite residence. The Shand Building, originally called "Shand Hall" cost 3,600 pounds. The following year it was extended to a design by Harry Mandeno. A memorial arch at the entrance to the grounds, built in blue stone and Oamaru stone and designed by Leslie Coombs was unveiled in 1923. In 1920 the Fulton Building provided six additional classrooms, but this has since been replaced with the gymnasium complex and rehoused swimming pool designed by E.J. Ted McCoy as part of the later major restoration and redevelopment of the school's buildings.
There is a teaching block, named after a former Rector, Mr. W.J. Morrell, which was erected in 1961 to a standard Ministry of Works design, though contextualised with blue stone fascias by the architect Ian R McAllum. A grandstand with similar fascias on its rearward elevation forms part of a quadrangle, with the Morrell building, behind the Lawson building. This was also designed by McAllum and built from 1962 to 1963. It has a cantilevered, multiple-gabled canopy added in 1964. Specialist science laboratories designed by Angus Black were constructed in 1967 and were named after the pioneering plastic surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe, an Old Boy of the school. Mr D J MacLachlan, Rector from 1963 to 1985, worked tirelessly for the construction of the main teaching block which now bears his name.
This is part of the major restoration and redevelopment which saw the refurbishment of the Main Tower Block, the central feature of which is the Maurice Joel Theatre. It also involved the construction of several large new buildings, forming a new quadrangle around the former Green in the greatest expansion of the complex since the 1880s. This considerable undertaking, designed by E.J. Ted McCoy was completed in 1983.
The new buildings, though unmistakably Modernist, nevertheless sit very comfortably with the old. Where Lawson's tower block is an exemplary composition in the Scottish Baronial style, taking its inspiration from the 16th-century tower houses and reading something like a toy fort or a castle to a modern eye, McCoy's blue stone aggregate and fair face concrete echo its materials while the new complex's gun slot windows are a playful reference to the Maginot line which echoes the old building's military theme. The new buildings are also very modestly set below the old so the latter take visual pre-eminence from a distance. The project won the architect a National Award from the New Zealand Institute of Architects. It has also been pointed to as an example of his unusual ability to mix the emphatically old with the unashamedly new.
Notable alumni
The Arts
- Alistair Te Ariki Campbell – poet, playwright and novelist
- Edwin Carr – composer
- Fergus Hume – pioneering detective novelist
- Rodney Eric Kennedy – drama tutor, pacifist and art critic
- Jonathan Lemalu – opera singer
- Bill Manhire – poet and short story writer
- Colin McCahon – painter
- John Grenell – country music singer-songwriter
- The four original band members of Netherworld Dancing Toys – pop band
- Sir William Southgate – conductor and composer
- Mark Hathaway - One News Reporter
Business
- Robert Laidlaw – founder of Farmers Trading Company
- Murray Raffills – founder of Treble Cone skifield
- Wong Tape, merchant in Dunedin
Law
- Alfred Charles Hanlon – barrister
- Sir John Salmond – legal thinker and judge
- Sir Bruce Robertson – judge court of appeal, president of the Law Commission
Public service
- Sir Francis Bell – former Prime Minister of New Zealand
- Peter Chin – former Mayor of Dunedin
- John Hannibal George, Member of Parliament
- Allan Highet – former Cabinet Minister
- Sir Clutha MacKenzie – World War I soldier, worker for the blind and author
- Sir Jack Marshall – former Prime Minister of New Zealand.
- Sir Keith Park – Gallipoli soldier and senior commander in the Battle of Britain
Science
- Eric Arthur - Canadian architect, writer and educator
- Frank Holmes – mining geologist, father of oil in the Arabian Peninsula
- E J "Ted" McCoy – architect
- Sir Archibald McIndoe – pioneering plastic surgeon
- J. Louis Salmond, architect
Sport
- Ian Billcliff – cricketer
- Hamish Bond – Olympic gold medallist rower
- Max Chu - cricketer
- Wyatt Crockett – All Black
- Russell Coutts – yachtsman
- Greg Henderson – cyclist
- Roger Johnson – Olympian – 1968, 1972 – 400 Meter Hurdles
- Byron Kelleher – former All Black
- Richie McCaw – Rugby World Cup-winning All Black captain
- Tom Palmer – England International Rugby Player
- Mahal Pearce – golfer, winner of the 2003 New Zealand Golf Open
- Hamish Rutherford – cricketer
- Charles Saxton – former All Black
- Ron Scott – sports administrator
Other
- Alexander Aitken – soldier, author, and mathematician
- David Gray – mass murderer
- Stewart Graeme Guthrie – police officer killed during David Gray's Aramoana massacre