Sherwood College | |
---|---|
Location | |
Nainital, Uttarakhand, India | |
Information | |
Type | Private |
Established | 1869 |
Principal | Amandeep Sandhu |
Faculty | 90 |
Grades | 3–12 |
Number of students | 1600 |
Color(s) | Maroon, bottle green and white |
Athletics | Football, cricket, tennis, basketball, swimming, field hockey, badminton, track and field |
Affiliation | ICSE, ISC |
Information | +91-5942-236361 |
Houses | Robin Hood, Friar Tuck, Little John, Alan-a-Dale |
Motto |
Mereat quisque palmam Let each one merit his prize |
Website | www.sherwood.edu.in |
Sherwood College is a co-educational residential school in Nainital, Uttarakhand, India, established in 1869.
Sherwood was founded in July 1869. It was the brain-child of Dr. Condon, H.S. Reid and others and under the patronage of the Rt. Rev. Robert Milman, DD, the seventh Metropolitan of India. The idea took shape as the Nainital Diocesan School, as Sherwood was once called.
Appeals to the public for funds were overwhelming, and a mixed school under Miss Bradbury was started at Petersfield. Its success was reflected in the large-scale rejection of applications for admission. The direct outcome of this pressure was to separate the girls from boys, the latter shifting to Stoneleigh near the Ramsay Hospital.
According to E. Atkinson's The Himalayan Gazetteer of 1882:
"In 1872 the number of pupils increased to 100, but still many applications were refused in consequence of the want of accommodation: The Committee then appealed to the general public for aid in erecting proper school buildings and met with generous response... In 1873 the Sherwood estate with house and magnificent grounds was purchased by the committee for the boys school and is perhaps the finest site and establishment of its kind in India. The report of the examiners show that both in the internal economy and in the character of the instruction imparted, the Diocesan schools thoroughly fulfill the designs of their founder's."
The school received notice to quit Sherwood so that a new Government House might be built. Accommodation was provided temporarily at Barnsdale near the present-day Secretariat. It was later decided to move the school to the 'health resort' of Khurpatal. Three houses on Alma hill — Tonnochy, Snow View and St. Cloud — served as temporary accommodation.
Land on a spur of Ayarpatta was acquired in 1897 and the foundation stone laid by Alfred, Lord Bishop of Lucknow, on June 5. From that day, June 5 has been reckoned as Founder's Day.
In 1918 the school was divided into four houses:
In 1922 electricity came to Sherwood, and on 15 June of the same year the was dedicated and sanctified.
The Horsman brothers, both old Sherwoodians, donated Rs. 75,000/- for the construction of the junior wing known as Horsman Wing, completed in 1927.
In 1937, the name of the school was changed from the Diocesan Boys' School to Sherwood College, although to this day it is known to the coolies as 'Malla Di-shen,' translated presumably as 'Upper Diocesan'.