Cornwall College | |
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Address | |
1 Orange Street |
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Coordinates | 18°28′44″N 77°55′17″W / 18.4790°N 77.9213°WCoordinates: 18°28′44″N 77°55′17″W / 18.4790°N 77.9213°W |
Information | |
Motto | Disce aut Discede (Learn or Leave) |
Denomination | Anglican |
Founded | 1896 |
Sister school | Montego Bay High School For Girls and Mt.Alvernia High School |
Dean | Mr.R.Gordon |
Headmaster | Dr. Lennow Rowe |
Hours in school day | 6 |
Houses | Baker,Barrett,Leader,Lockett,Jackson and Kerr |
Color(s) | red and gold |
Slogan | "Disce Aut Discede" Learn or Leave |
Nickname | CC |
Rival | Herbert Morrison Technical High School |
1 Orange Street
Montego Bay, Cornwall
Jamaica
Cornwall College is a prominent public high school for boys located on Orange Street in Montego Bay, Saint James, Jamaica. It is the third oldest high school in the county of Cornwall.
The school in St. James dates to the 19th century. In 1871 the academy closed it doors when representatives from Scotland encouraged the government of Jamaica to establish a Queen's College in Spanish Town. This institution also did not last long and again government sponsored secondary education was lacking in the country. In 1895, a Presbyterian minister, Rev Adam Thompson, and a government representative for St. James and Trelawny, Hon. John Kerr, petitioned the government to allocate 500 pounds for secondary education in Montego Bay. Hence, in 1896, the second city gave birth to Cornwall College which was at that time located on Barracks Road(site of the Public Works Office) and was called Montego Bay Government Secondary School.
Mr. E. Lockett, B.A., was named the first headmaster and he served until 1903. He was succeeded by Anglican priest, Rev. George Hibbert Leader in 1904. He served some 19 years at the institution which ran into difficulties due to lack of space in the classrooms. It was then that the Hon D.H. Corinaldi stepped in and used his status to procure 2,500 pounds from the government in 1909 to assist in the provision of a new school site.
Between 1910 and 1911, 34 acres of land were bought at the Pleasant Hill Estate where the institution was constructed. The school was officially opened at its new location in 1911 by the then Governor of Jamaica, Sir Sidney Oliver. In 1922, Montego Bay Government Secondary School became a name of the past and the large, beautiful institution was renamed Cornwall College. In 1953, Cornwall College came under the leadership of E.A. Barrett, the school's first Jamaican national. Barrett set new trends and advanced the school's population to over 650 boys. During his leadership the institution was named the first government school in Jamaica and also the first high school to offer Chemistry and Physics as subjects in its curriculum in the West Indies and for many years the majority of doctors and pharmacists in Jamaica were graduates of the school.