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Sacred Heart Cathedral School, Thorndon

Sacred Heart Cathedral School
Address
12 Guildford Terrace,
Thorndon,
Wellington,
New Zealand
Coordinates 41°16′36″S 174°46′34″E / 41.2766°S 174.7762°E / -41.2766; 174.7762
Information
Type State Integrated; Full Primary (Year 0-8)
Established 1 September 1850
Ministry of Education Institution no. 2985
School roll 218(February 2017)
Socio-economic decile 9

Sacred Heart Cathedral School is a New Zealand, Catholic, primary school located in the central-city suburb of Thorndon, Wellington, New Zealand. It is part of a Catholic precinct dating from 1850. It joins St Mary's College, Wellington and Sacred Heart Cathedral, Wellington and is located opposite the Motherhouse of the Sisters of Mercy in Wellington.

Philippe Viard, first Catholic Bishop of Wellington, blessed and opened a convent and school on 1 September 1850. From 1850 until 1861 it was staffed by the Sisters of Mary, a group of religious sisters under the direction of Bishop Viard. These four sisters had arrived with the bishop from Auckland on the establishment of the Diocese. They were: Catherin McCann (Sister M Cecelia); Mary Anne McGarvey (Sister M Joseph); Elizabeth Walsh (Sister M Teresa); and 14-year-old Sarah McGarvey (Mary Anne's sister). The building served as a temporary school by day and the sisters residence at night. This establishment was the beginning of the present day St Mary's College as well as Sacred Heart Cathedral School. From 1861, when they first arrived in Wellington, the Sisters of Mercy took over the school and were on its staff until the late twentieth century when the staff became entirely lay.

The existing main building of the school was completed in 1892 and was designed to accommodate 300 children. When St Mary's Cathedral was burnt down in 1898, that school building (St Mary's Chapel) also served as the Thorndon parish church until the new Sacred Heart Basilica was completed in 1901. Later the playing area of the school expanded into the former site of Bishop Viard's residence ("Viard House") towards the Basilica, which was officially made the Wellington Cathedral in 1983. The ample size of the wooden school building enabled its later redevelopment in 1975 by building new classrooms inside the existing roof. Other substantial buildings were added in the first decade of the twenty-first century.


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