Rangpur Zilla School রংপুর জিলা স্কুল |
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Logo of the institution
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Address | |
Kachari bazaar road Rangpur District Rangpur, 5400 Bangladesh |
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Information | |
School type | Government funded Secondary School |
Motto |
Knowledge is Power জ্ঞানই শক্তি |
Established | 1832 |
School board | Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education, Dinajpur |
Session | January–December |
Principal | Abu Rayhan Mijanur Rahman (2010 – present) |
Staff | 10 |
Teaching staff | 53 |
Grades | 3-10 |
Gender | Male Only |
Age | 07 to 17 |
Number of students | 1800 |
Medium of language | Bengali |
Campus | Rangpur 5400 |
Campus size | 14 acres |
Sports | Football, cricket, basketball, volleyball, badminton |
Nickname | RZS |
Alumni | Prafulla Chaki, anti-British revolutionary, Anisul Hoque, playwright, poet, novelist, journalist |
EIIN | 127372 |
Special project | Connecting classrooms under British Council |
Website | www.rangpurzillaschool.edu.bd |
Rangpur Zilla School (Rangpur District School) is a school located in Rangpur District, Bangladesh. It is one of the earliest schools established in Bengal.
The school was established in 1832 as Rangpur Zamindar School, by the local Zaminders or landlords. Nathial Smith, the district collector working for the British East India Company led government, also had a central role. The school was inaugurated by Lord William Bentinck, the erstwhile Governor General of Bengal. The Maharaja or Cooch Bihar donated funds for construction of the school building. Krishna Nath Ray joined as the first headmaster of the school.
The school was taken under the management of the Government of British India in 1857. It was affiliated with the Calcutta University. In 1862, it was renamed to Rangpur Zilla School.
The school building and other facilities were expanded between 1870 and 1874.
But it is a matter of great sorrow that the house burnt down in 1878 and the school had a very precarious existence for the next few years. Then it was first removed to Keranipara where the classes were held in different private houses for about a year. It was then shifted to the coochbehar building whose ruins are hardly to be seen near the main entrance of the present school compound the building being very old and in a dilapidated condition the school was again shifted to the silk-godown of Mr. Rainy in the north-west of the present district board building where it continued for one year. It was removed to a big house (Atchala) where the present demonstration farm stands. It continued there for five years. It was during this period that the school was raised to the status of a second grade college. Babu Chandra Nath Bhattacharjee, Head teacher, became the principal and the renowned Pandit Jadabeswar Tarkartna, the professor of Sanskrit. The college lasted for only four years and had to be reduced to its former Status for paucity of students.
The foundation of the present building was laid on 15.66 acres of land in2883 by Sir Ashley Eden the then Lieutenant Governor of Bengal and the School was removed there the same year, Quarters for the headteacher’s subsequently provided by a private endowment fund which was administered by district Magistrate. The interest being spent for the up-keep of the same.
Since then the school has gradually developed into a first class institution catering to the educational needs of the various communities of the district. Science side classes, a special feature of the school, were opened in 1904 and to meet the growing demand for accommodation four commodious rooms were added to the original building in 1915. In order to provide facilities for moffussil (that is rural) student three hostels have been attached to the school. The Hindu and Kshatriya Hostel were constructed in 1919. The school now possesses extensive play grounds, commodious three storied hostels, a spacious common room, an auditorium with modern facilities, a large library, an open air gymnasium, and small flower garden. The centenary of the school was celebrated on 11 April 1937. Recently this year it has celebrated the one century and 175 years.