GC Deputy Head
Compiler together with her sister, Lilian Harris, of the Harris album.
St Stithians College was founded in 1953 and consisted at the time of the founding BP and BC classes. In 1995, with the advent of the girls' schools on campus, the entities serving the boys became known as the Boys' College and Boys' Preparatory schools. Reference to the Boys' College within AtoM indicates the high school years from Grade 8 to Grade 12 for its entire history from 1953 to the present.
BC Afrikaans teacher during two separate periods.
Class of 1960
First editor of College Chronicle, 1960.
In BP and BC to grade 10, 1956.
Founder pupil.
Trustee of St Stithians College, present at laying of Foundation Stone.
Dr J.B. Webb, a vice president of the World Methodist Council
Dr. JB. Webb led the Southern Transvaal District [of the Methodist Church] from 1957 to 1964.
A loose association of parents worked avidly from 1953 to 1957, focusing on raising funds to build a school swimming pool. Thereafter, this loose association was formalised into the first Parents' Association in 1957. For a full history and a list of early office bearers, see Mears, W G (1972) The Early History of St Stithians College, pages 73 - 83.
Founding member of the PA, 1957, Chairman of the PA in 1959.
Member of Council 1960 - 1991
Chairman of Council 1967 - 1968
Trustee 1967 - 1994
Deceased June 2001. Obituary in Stythian 2001, p.135
Donor of The Good Samaritan window in the Chapel in memory of his father
Deceased
Tribute to Ray Bradley on his retirement in Stythian 1995, p.29
College parent, founding member of the PA committee.
Vice-Chairman of the PA 1957
Member of the PA Swimming Bath Sub-committee 1957
Member of the PA Fund-raising Sub-committee 1957
Parent
St Stithians College was founded in 1953 and consisted at the time of the founding BP and BC classes. In 1995, with the advent of the girls' schools on campus, the entities serving the boys became known as the Boys' College and Boys' Preparatory schools. Reference to the Boys' Prep within AtoM indicates the Preparatory school years from Grade 1 to Grade 7 for its history from 1953 to 1996 and Grade 3 to Grade 7 from 1996 onwards.
BC Headmaster 1969 - 1988
D.o.b. 26 March 1934, deceased 25 September 2021
Chairman of the Conference of Headmasters and Headmistresses of Private Schools of South Africa.
For celebrations of Mark Henning's 80th birthday in 2014 see https://www.stithian.com/news/entry/mark-henning-turns-80
For memorial tributes see: https://www.stithian.com/content/page/mark-henning-memorial-tribute
First official school photographer
Class of 1963
In BC to grade 10, 1956
Class of 1957
Founder pupil
Class of 1962
Class of 1956
Founder pupil
Class of 1956
Founder pupil
Founder pupil, Class of 1957
Class of 1957
Founder pupil
Class of 1957
Class of 1957
Class of 1957
Founder pupil
Deceased
Class of 1957
Class of 1957
Foundation scholar
Kent was born in Hastings, in the UK in 1891 and emigrated to South Africa with his parents in 1894. He was educated at Kingswood College in Grahamstown (now known as Makhanda). It is likely that it was here that he met fellow Methodists, Wally Mears, Gilbert Tucker, Thomas Hall and Basil Read, all of whom were later involved in the founding and building of St Stithians College.
Kent was an accountant by profession and formed his own company, Palmer, Kent and Co., that was the first to be engaged by the Anglo-Transvaal Consolidated Investment Company.
Kent was an active Methodist who became a St Stithians Trustee on the death of DF Corlett. He became Chairman of council at a difficult time when there were differences in interpretation of the roles of the College governance and that of the Headmaster. Kent was also involved in the selection of Walter Macfarlane as first BP headmaster.
On 30 October 1957, Kent opened the first swimming bath as it was then known. This had been a priority for parents as the College offered few sporting opportunities at its inception and the parents felt that a swimming batch would serve all the boys. However, it was not a priority for Council. As a result, the parents had to raise the funds for the pool themselves, but invited Kent to officially open the pool. He was vice-chair of council at the time. By 1957, the country knew that it would be changing from the imperial to the metric system and St Stithians was thus the first school in Johannesburg to have a pool measured in metres rather than yards.
The BP Library was officially opened by Mrs Eunice Lilian Kent in 1969.
An obituary for Mr. Kent appears in the Stythian of 1967, page 7. It was written by Ray Bradley. Here is a link to the magazine in AtoM: https://atom.stithian.com/index.php/stythian-magazine-1967
Kent House in the BP is named in his honour.
Journalist with the South African Tatler magazine.
Photo-journalist with the South African Tatler magazine
Class of 1963
Class of 1963
BC teacher: English and Geography
Class of 1962
Class of 1964
Class of 1964
First Biology (Life Sciences) teacher in the BC
Deputy Head
Class of 1967
In BC to grade 11, 1967
Class of 1965
Class of 1966
Class of 1967
Class of 1963
Foundation pupil
Member of Council 1977 - 1983
Deceased 2020
Class of 1962
Class of 1962
BP Staff member 1973 - 1974
Alumnus Class of 1963
Class of 1961
Used where the creation of an item cannot be attributed to an identified single person or group of people.
• Born 1859 in Falmouth, died April 5th1943 in Johannesburg at the age of 84.
• Educated at Falmouth government school.
• Apprenticed for 5 years in the building trade for which his parents had to pay a premium.
• Part of his apprenticeship was a training course in architecture. During this training, he met Collins.
• Over and above the many donations made during his lifetime to the Methodist Church, to the support of the Epworth Children’s Homes (for the orphaned children of soldiers), to the rand Aid Association for the care of the elderly, to the building of a clinic in Alexandra township and to the founding of a hospital in Falmouth, he left a bequest of £146,800 to charities both in South Africa and in Britain. (This is the equivalent of over £6 million or R125.3 million today.)
• Mountstephens bequeathed £50,000 to the establishment of the College. (This is the equivalent of over £2 million or R49.2 million today.)
Collins and Mountstephens had much in common: apart from being tradesmen and of similar age, they were both Methodists, non-smokers and teetotallers. Having completed their apprenticeships, they realised that Britain had few opportunities to offer them. In the second half of the 19thC, a period of devastating hardship in Britain, eight million people emigrated of which 146,600 of them were from Cornwall.
Collins and Mountstephens were originally headed for the USA, but fate dealt the two impatient and impulsive young men a significant hand. The ship on which they were destined to sail to the USA was delayed a few days. Instead, they boarded the SS Teuton to South Africa. They landed in Cape Town on 19th September 1880. Although offered positions in Cape Town, they went to Port Elizabeth where there was an even greater demand for their skills.
Attracted by what the discovery of diamonds offered, they set off in June 1881 for Kimberley. Here, they secured building contracts and were eventually able to establish their own building company. By 1886 they were ready for a new challenge and headed for Johannesburg where they established Mountstephens and Collins (Pty) Ltd at Oriental Chambers, 36B Pritchard Street and also invested in mining shares. Collins also invested in the Cape Fruit Farms company. Both businesses prospered, attributed to their sound work ethic, their business acumen and their sobriety.
In Johannesburg they met with Charles Leake, a fellow Methodist, at whose offices, the first Methodist Church services were regularly held on Sunday mornings. It was this small group of men who brought the Methodist Church to the Witwatersrand. At the time, Johannesburg was little more than a dusty mining camp inhabited by miners, adventurers, traders, tradesmen and con artists with limited access to the goodwill of any church. Mountstephens and Collins also encountered imperialists such as Rhodes and Jameson as well as the Transvaal’s President Paul Kruger.
Although Mountstephens and Collins Ltd made little progress during the Anglo-Boer Wars, the business flourished after 1902. The partners were able to contribute to the building of the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg. Here they met Daniel Corlett, Leslie Kent and also Gilbert Tucker. Tucker became their accountant, a close friend, a trustee and a significant player in the founding of St Stithians. Leake and Kent also became trustees and Corlett’s company was hired to construct the original College buildings.
Mountstephens married and lived in the house, Pendennis, in East Avenue, Parktown, close to Clarendon Circle. Not only was he generous to the church and to charities in his birthplace, but he and his first wife also took on the care of her widowed sister-in-law and her children, raising them as their own until he himself was widowed. Details of Mountstephens and the family that he raised came to light recently through an interview with his “grand-daughter” (Mrs Shirley Thompson – b.1935) conducted in Cape Town in early January 2020. Shirley recalls him from her early childhood as a generous, loving man.
Collins and Mountstephens had to be persuaded to leave a legacy to an educational institution as they believed that education was the duty of the state. However, Gilbert Tucker, himself an alumnus of Kingswood College in Grahamstown, convinced them of what could be achieved by establishing a Methodist school in Johannesburg. Collins and Mountstephens realised over time that state schools did not offer what they considered to be a good education: an emphasis on Christian principles and the development of leaders in social matters. Eventually they were persuaded to leave the residue of their estates to the founding of a Methodist school: St Stithians College.
Anglican Bishop of Johannesburg present at the official opening of the COllege and laying of the Foundation Stone.
Class of 1957
Class of 1957
Foundation pupil
Class of 1958
First appointed school architect in 1944 and who later worked with Paynter on the final design of the original College buildings
Scottish architect who practised in both Cape Town and Johannesburg. [Source: https://www.artefacts.co.za/main/Buildings/archframes.php?archid=1050]
In BP, grade 2, 1956
Head of the Transvaal Cornish Association, who, in 1953 donated a cup to the College.
Married the daughter of EM Harris in the first wedding to be held in the College Chapel.
Class of 1959
Founding Head of St Stithians Collegiate
Head of Stanford Lake College, Magoebaskloof 2001 - 2002
Head of Bridge House, Franschhoek 2002 - 2010
Head of Oprah Winfrey Academy 2010 -
Anne van Zyl was appointed as founding Head at the Girls’ Collegiate, as it was known in its first few years of existence, in 1995. Anne had been the former Head at Pretoria High School for Girls for six years and was known for her courage and creativity. Anne was a visionary, a team builder, a fearless forward thinker as far as girl’s education was concerned and her courageous attitude and innovative thinking saw the Girls’ College rise to an institution to be reckoned with academically and in the sporting arena in a very short time. Although Anne’s past was embedded in traditional views of education, she chose to forge a new path at the Girls’ College in terms of leadership, recognition, and creative thinking. Under her leadership the Girls’ College went where no other school had gone in terms of founding a girls’ school on a male dominated campus. She was instrumental in joining Round Square with its philosophy based on the six pillars of International understanding, Democracy, Environmental stewardship, Adventure, Leadership and Service. These pillars became the cornerstone of the ethos of the Girls’ College as we know it today.
The original quad, before the amphitheatre was built, was part of the first phase of the new school. It was a shared space with the Girls’ Preparatory and one where the two Girls’ Schools were unified. In 2016 the quad was reconstructed with the seating. This space continues to be a central, functional meeting space. It reverberates with war cries, drama performances, debating competitions, music concerts and assemblies. In the early years, the Boys’ College secretly snuck in to perform the “haka” as a surprise for their new “sisters” on campus. If walls could talk!
This quad is a landmark in the Girls’ College, which epitomises Anne's achievements within six years. It continues to be a landmark in the history of St Stithians College.
BC History and Afrikaans teacher
Cricket coach
Spouse of the BC Head and Rector
Drama teacher and producer/director of many stage productions in the BC prior to the introduction of Drama as a school subject in the College.
Class of 2004
GP Founder student
1995 BC English teacher
1996 - 2003 GC founding teacher, HOD English.
Lisa Benning (Palmer) became headmistress at Brescia House and later at Kingsmead College.
GC founding Staff member
GC History HID
Founder staff member
GC (1997 - 1999) Physical Science teacher
BC (2000 - 2006) Physical Science HOD
GC staff member
GP class teacher
GP Founder staff member: 1996
GP staff
GP Founder staff member
GC staff member
GP staff member
GP Librarian
GP Founding staff member: established first library for the GP.
BP Grade 0 teacher 1988 - 1995
GP teacher 1998 - 2000
Class of 1960
Class of 1960
Class of 1960
Class of 1960
Class of 1960
In BC to grade 10, 1960
In BC until grade 11, 1960
BP teacher 1962 - 1999
Deputy Head from 1968 - 1999
Deceased whilst in service to the school
Class of 1967
BC History teacher 1969 - 2002
Jimmy Verner started his teaching career as a boarding assistant in Mountstephens House and remained with the College for 34 years after which he joined the staff of Bishop Bavin College. During his tenure at St Stithians he attained the position of House Director (Mountstephens House) and later Director of Grade 12. Jimmy was a highly capable Mr Fixit and could always be relied on to find a quick solution if anything technical went awry. His historical knowledge was immense and much of the account of the recent St Stithians history that appeared on our early websites was compiled by him. Jimmy was also involved with Swimming, Life-Saving and Drivers' Education and made a huge contribution backstage for our musical and drama stage productions.
BC Latin teacher
Co-founder of St Stithians Rigby Festival
BP and BC staff member 1962 - 2000.
Ken Hovelmeier served as a BP sports master from 1962 to 1971. From 1971, when the loss of his sight prevented him from continuing with sport, he joined the BC staff as a Counsellor. The early development of both Sport and Counselling at the College can largely be attributed to Ken's initiative.
He went on to become Director of VIth form before retiring to practice privately.
BC Physical Sciences teacher
BC Maths and Computer Science teacher
Deceased c.2014
BC Afrikaans teacher
BC Biology (Life Sciences) teacher
Staff member in BP and BC.
Class of 1981
Class of 1980
Class of 1981
1981 BC Head Prefect
BC Director of Music
Co-founder of the Duke of Cornwall Singers
Class of 1993
Class of 1991
Chair of OSA 2004 - 2008
Chairman of Council 2013 - 2021
Class of 1995
Deceased 2019
Class of 1991
Class of 1990