(1854–1925), founder of the Pretoria Boys High School (
Vanity Fair, 1897) The antecedent of the current school is the historic
Staats Model School, built 1896-1897 by the government of the
Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (later
Transvaal) in central Pretoria. Alfred Fernández Harington was appointed English master on 1 October 1895. The school was not in operation for very long owing to the outbreak of the
Second Boer War in 1899. At the time, the building served as a prison, where notably
Winston Churchill was briefly imprisoned. The
school was part of the
whites-only education system, until the abolition of
apartheid.
Pretoria High School (19011903) With Pretoria under British control, it became apparent to
Lord Milner, the
Colonial Secretary at the time, that the educational facilities in the city needed attention as there was no secondary school for English-speaking pupils. The
Staats Model School was duly refurbished. It was renamed
Pretoria High School and became the first of the so-called
Milner schools in the
Transvaal, opening on 3 June 1901 with Charles Hope - who also founded
Potchefstroom Boys High - as
headmaster. Initial enrolment was 32 pupils, both boys and girls, which increased to 132 by August of that year. Hope left 15 months later, along with the girls, who were finally accommodated into the old building of the former
Transvaal Republic's
Staatsmeischjeskool (State Girls' School), which was renamed
Pretoria High School for Girls.
Pretoria College (19031909) Under the new headmaster, Harold Atkinson, enrolment increased to 100 boys by 1903. The name of the school was also changed to
Pretoria College. Atkinson left at the end of 1905 and was succeeded by J F Acheson who stayed with the school until it moved from Skinner Street to its current site in 1909. Formal devolution between primary and high school pupils only occurred in 1905.
The new buildings and bilingualism (1910-1920) Milner's intention was to create a stable educational infrastructure in the new colony's capital and duly set aside of ground to the south-east of central Pretoria for the construction of new academic institutions. The southernmost , which included the
Waterkloof Kop (English: Waterkloof Hill), was chosen as the new site for Pretoria Boys High School. The architect,
Patrick Eagle, met the challenge by designing an edifice rivalling its larger contemporary, Sir
Herbert Baker's
Union Buildings. Eagle chose to site the main buildings on the ridge of the hill giving the school its well-known dramatic setting. The new school buildings were officially opened in 1909 by
Jan Smuts, then colonial secretary of the
Transvaal. The main building of the school, sited on Waterkloof Hill, is at present close to
University of Pretoria, sitting opposite to the distant
Union Buildings on
Meintjieskop. One year later, the four colonies of the
Transvaal,
Orange River Colony,
Natal and the
Cape formed the
Union of South Africa. Keen to forge unity between English and Dutch (Afrikaner) South Africans, Smuts' influence was evident when, on 6 April 1910, the school absorbed 100 boys and staff from the Dutch-medium Eendracht High School to form a dual-medium high school. The combined school was now named
Pretoria High School for Boys - Pretoria Hogere school voor Jongens. Smuts would later send his own sons to the school.
Devolution and re-establishment (1920) The dual-medium institution would last ten years. By 1920, the divide between English and Afrikaans speakers had become apparent nationwide; this was reflected in the need for a separate Afrikaans high school in Pretoria. Consequently, the
Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool was formed immediately south of its parent, becoming the first Afrikaans-medium high school in the country, several years before
Afrikaans attained official recognition as a language.
Headmasters since 1909 • William Hofmeyr (19091935) • Daniel Matheson (19361949) • Noel Pollock (19501955) • Desmond Abernethy (19561973) • Malcolm Armstrong (19741989) • William E. Schroder (19902009) • Anthony Reeler (2010-June 2020) • Gregary Hassenkamp (July 2020-) == School ==