Palmerston North Boys' High School | |
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Nihil Boni Sine Labore
commonly translated as 'Nothing Achieved Without Hard Work' |
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Address | |
263 Featherston St, Palmerston North, New Zealand | |
Coordinates | 40°20′55″S 175°36′26″E / 40.3485°S 175.6073°ECoordinates: 40°20′55″S 175°36′26″E / 40.3485°S 175.6073°E |
Information | |
Type | State, Day and Boarding |
Established | 1902 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 202 |
Rector | David M. Bovey |
Grades | 9-13 |
Gender | Boys |
School roll | 1790(July 2016) |
Socio-economic decile | 8P |
Website | pnbhs.school.nz |
Palmerston North Boys' High School is a state secondary school for boys located in Palmerston North, New Zealand.
Palmerston North Boys' High School has a campus located on Featherston Street between Rangitikei and North Streets in the central city. There are secondary entrances to the school on Wellesbourne Street, Ivanhoe Terrace, Edgeware Road and North Street. The rear boundary is shared with Queen Elizabeth College.
Most of the school's approximately 1,700 students are "day boys" from Palmerston North and surrounding townships such as Ashhurst, Levin, and Feilding. Around 170 boys are housed in an onsite boarding hostel - College House (Also known as 'Murray House,' after former Rector John Murray; his former home is part of the hostel).
The school's mission statement is to "develop educated men of outstanding character".
In 1902, Palmerston North High School was established as a co-educational secondary school with an initial roll of 84 students (40 boys and 44 girls, the first person being on the roll was a girl). The first classes were held at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church Sunday School hall. In 1920, Palmerston North High School was split into two single-sex schools: Palmerston North Girls' High School and Palmerston North Boys' High School.
In a 1990 case, M & R v Syms and the Board of Trustees of Palmerston North Boys High School [2003] NZAR 705, the plaintiffs challenged the steps taken by the Rector in suspending both students for consumption of alcohol, and later by the Board expelling M. McGechan J gave judgment for the plaintiffs holding that the Rector's discretion as to whether to suspend the pupils "is not to be ignored, as if non-existent. Nor is it to be fettered by a Principal through self imposed rules permitting no exceptions". The Judge further found that the Board did not exercise its mind on the ultimate discretion whether or not to uplift suspension or procure removal.
In September 2006 the school had an outbreak of tuberculosis in which a substantial number of students contracted a latent form of tuberculosis, as well as a small amount of students who had active tuberculosis. However this outbreak was resolved and the school has since been running normally.
The then Rector, Tim O'Connor, was awarded a Woolf Fisher Fellowship and the Sir Peter Blake Leadership Award in 2007.