One Tree Hill College | |
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Address | |
Physical: 421–451 Great South Road, Penrose, Auckland 1061, New Zealand Postal: PO Box 17471, Greenlane, Auckland 1546, New Zealand |
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Coordinates | 36°54′13″S 174°48′23″E / 36.9035°S 174.8064°ECoordinates: 36°54′13″S 174°48′23″E / 36.9035°S 174.8064°E |
Information | |
Type | State, co-educational, secondary school |
Motto | 'Ad Altiora Contende' 'Whaia e Koe te iti Kahurangi' ('Strive For Higher Things') |
Established | 1955 |
Ministry of Education Institution no. | 85 |
Principal | Nick Coughlan |
School roll | 1110(February 2017) |
Socio-economic decile | 3G |
Website | onetreehillcollege.school.nz |
Physical: 421–451 Great South Road, Penrose, Auckland 1061, New Zealand
One Tree Hill College is a state coeducational secondary school located in the district of Ellerslie in Auckland, New Zealand.
One Tree Hill College, formerly Penrose High School, opened on 1 February 1955. In 2013 it has a student body of 930 consisting of more than 40 different cultures.
The governing body for the college since 1989 has been the One Tree Hill College Board of Trustees. It provides curriculum, discipline and financial oversight but day-to-day management of the college, within the board's policy framework, is handled by the principal and the senior leadership team.
Penrose takes its name from Penrose Farm carved out of about 400ha (1000 acres) of land purchased by Cornishman William Williams from the Maori owners in 1843.
Williams (1806–1876), not related to the Anglican missionary of the same name, named the farm after Penrose Farm in the parish of Budock, Cornwall, where he is thought to have been born (though there is no record of this) and where his father was allegedly bailiff. According to Williams it was the ‘best farm in Budock, and the best in all Cornwall’.
Research by foundation principal Ron Stacey reveals the property on which Penrose High School stands originally formed part of land granted to James Haldane Watt, a settler, on 10 December 1847. When he died in 1876 he left it to his two sons, Robert Henry Watt and David Bruce Watt. It was later mortgaged to Alfred Greatback Glover who gained ownership in 1884 after the Watts defaulted. It was later let to Jane Board of Ellerslie and sold to her in 1896. The land was later subdivided.
The Department of Education starting acquiring land for a secondary school during the period of the first Labour government. Once secondary education became more accessible after the abolition of the proficiency certificate in 1937, the department set its sights on building a super-school of superior quality — a ‘landmark’ in Ministry of Works’ parlance.