The concept of the
South African College was formed in 1791 when the Dutch Commissioner-General,
Jacob Abraham Uitenhage de Mist, asked for funding to be set aside to improve schooling in the Cape. After the
British took control of the
Cape Colony, the second colonial governor –
Lord Charles Henry Somerset - gave permission for the funds reserved by De Mist to be used to establish the South African College in 1814. The founding committee met in the
Groote Kerk to discuss funding and accommodation for the school, and – on 1 October 1829 – the inauguration of the South African College was held and classes began. The original location of the school was in the
Weeshuis on Long Street. The school moved to what is now known as the
Egyptian Building in the Gardens district of Cape Town in 1841. It was decided in 1874 that the younger students should be separated from their older counterparts. The South African College was separated into the
College which became the
University of Cape Town and the
College School. In 1896, the College School moved to its own building on Orange Street, separate from the college. For the next few decades, the school grew and the building became too small for the number of students attending. In 1959, the school moved to its current home on the Montebello Estate in Newlands, former home of the mining magnate
Sir Max Michaelis, after negotiations spanning a decade with the Cape Administration. In 2012, the school grounds were used to film
Spud 2: The Madness Continues. == School buildings ==