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Ruzawi School

Ruzawi School
Ruzawi School Logo.png
Ruzawi School Badge
Location
Marondera, Mashonaland East
Zimbabwe
Coordinates 18°14′09″S 31°33′19″E / 18.2359°S 31.5554°E / -18.2359; 31.5554Coordinates: 18°14′09″S 31°33′19″E / 18.2359°S 31.5554°E / -18.2359; 31.5554
Information
Type Independent, preparatory, boarding school
Motto Learning Knights
Religious affiliation(s) Christianity
Denomination Anglican
Established February 1928
Founders Robert Grinham
Maurice Carver
Oversight Ruzawi Schools (Pvt) Ltd
Headmaster Paul Davis
Gender Co-educational
Age 6 to 12
Pupils 231 (2016)
Houses Fairbridge, Grenfell
Song Ruzawi Anthem
Sports 8
Tuition US$2,900.00
Affiliations
Alumni Ruzawi Old Pupils Association (R.O.P.A)
Website

Ruzawi School is an Anglican,independent, co-educational, preparatory, boarding school for children aged 6 to 12. It is located near the town of Marondera in Zimbabwe, in southern Africa. Ruzawi, which was founded by Robert Grinham and Maurice Carver, has a pupil population ranging from 205 to 220 depending on the balance of boys and girls and the number of pupils in each age group. In the Infants' Department there is one class each for Grade One and Grade Two. An additional entry point at Grade Three enables there to be two classes from that level up to Grade 7. The school is situated some five kilometres south of Marondera in extensive grounds surrounded by many hectares of indigenous miombo woodland and exotic eucalyptus plantations.

Ruzawi School is a member of the Association of Trust Schools (ATS) and the Head is a member of the Conference of Heads of Independent Schools in Zimbabwe (CHISZ).

In 1926, Robert Grinham and Maurice Carver decided to establish a boys' school in Southern Africa. South Africa was a possible venue but eventually it was decided to establish the school in Zimbabwe (then Southern Rhodesia). Various sites were visited in and around the capital but the most suitable venue was a few miles south of the then village of Marandellas, now Marondera.

The old Ruzawi Inn, for many years a staging post on the carriage and wagon route from the capital to the eastern border, was up for sale. Neither the new road nor the recently built railway passed close to the Inn, which was no longer, an essential stopping place for travelers. The bedrooms, dining room, kitchen and ancillary buildings proved ideal as both accommodation and classrooms for the newly established boys' boarding school. An important use was found for the old stable building close to the inn. It was appropriately converted into the School Chapel. The building, now over a hundred years old, is equally appropriately in use as the School Museum. The founders of Ruzawi enlisted academic and domestic staff to help convert the Inn to a boys' boarding school. At the time, the boys attending Ruzawi ranged in age from seven to fourteen years.


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