*** Welcome to piglix ***

Anglo Chinese School

Anglo-Chinese School
Anglo-Chinese School Crest.png
Indonesia Singapore
District information
Type Christian (Methodist) school
Motto The Best is Yet To Be
Grades
  • Primary: 1-6
  • Secondary: 1-5
  • Junior College: 1-2
  • IB: 1-2 + Pre-IB: 1-4
Established March 1, 1886 (1886-03-01)
Governing agency Methodist Church of Singapore
Schools
Students and staff
Students

Boys

  • ACS (Junior)
  • ACS (Primary)
  • ACS (Barker Road)
  • ACS (Independent) (year 1-4)

Mixed

  • ACS (Independent) (year 5-6)
  • ACS (International) Singapore
  • ACJC
  • ACS Jakarta
Colors      Red
     Gold
     Blue
Other information
Publication ECHO magazine
Website www.acs.sch.edu.sg

Boys

Mixed

The Anglo-Chinese School (ACS), is a family of Methodist schools in Singapore and Indonesia founded in 1886 by Bishop William Fitzjames Oldham as an extension of the Methodist Church. Anglo-Chinese School is usually abbreviated as "ACS," with the Anglo-Chinese Junior College abbreviated as "ACJC." Its students and alumni are referred as "ACSians" (/ˈɑksiɑn/). ACS was the first school in Singapore to have a flower named after it, the "Ascocenda Anglo-Chinese School orchid", a hybrid created by the school to mark its 116th Founder's Day on March 1, 2002.

Founded on March 1, 1886 by Bishop William Fitzjames Oldham as an extension of the Methodist Church, the school's first location was a shophouse at 70 Amoy Street, Singapore with a total of 13 pupils. The name of the school came from it conducting lessons in English at night and Chinese in the afternoon. By the following year, enrollment had increased to 104 and the school moved to Coleman Street.

Between 1914 and 1920, under the leadership of the Reverend J. S. Nagle, the school introduced regular religious (or "chapel") services and physical education classes. Afternoon classes were started for academically weak pupils. In a bid to ensure continuity in school life and keep the school adequately staffed, Nagle encouraged ex-students, known as "old boys", to join the school as teachers. To this day, the Anglo-Chinese School Old Boys' Association is a link through which many "old boys" continue to maintain close ties with the school.

The Anglo-Chinese Continuation School started in 1925 under new principal, the Reverend P.L. Peach, who had to leave the school due to the newly imposed government age limits on school attendance by boys. Eventually, ACS became the Oldham Methodist School while a secondary school opened in Cairnhill Road.

During the World War II Japanese occupation of Singapore between 1942 and 1945, lessons were suspended. The school opened again in 1946, a year after the Japanese surrender, once the buildings at Cairnhill and Coleman Street had been made safe following damage sustained during the war. The pre-war principal, T. W. Hinch, who had been interned by the Japanese during the occupation and had been sent back to England to recover, returned to the school in June 1946. He set up "X" and "Y" classes, each with different levels of difficulty, for students who had missed years of their education due to the occupation. In September, 1950, the secondary school relocated from Cairnhill Street to Barker Road.


...
Wikipedia

...