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St. Andrew's Scots School

Saint Andrew's Scots School
(Spanish: Escuela Escocesa San Andrés)
Club San Andres Crest.svg
the school's logo
Address
Nogoyá 550
Olivos, Vicente López Partido, Buenos Aires Province CP 1636
Argentina
Information
Funding type Private
Motto Sic itur ad astra
(Thus one goes to the stars)
Religious affiliation(s) Presbyterian Church
Patron saint(s) Saint Andrew
Established 1 September 1838 (178 years ago) (1838-09-01)
Status Open
Headmaster Gabriel Rshaid
Gender Co-educational (girls only at inception)
Language English, Spanish, French, Chinese (Mandarin), Portuguese
Hours in school day 7:50 until 15:30 or 16:30 (depending on day)
Campus 1
Campus type Field
Houses Brown, Dodds, Fleming, Monteith
Color(s)          Navy blue and white
Slogan "Sic Itur Ad Astra"
Sports Basketball, football, field hockey, rugby, swimming, volleyball
Nickname El Santo
Team name Club San Andrés
Affiliations University of San Andrés
Website

The Saint Andrew's Scots School (Spanish: Escuela Escocesa San Andrés), mostly known simply as Saint Andrew's, is an Argentine bilingual school in Olivos, Vicente López Partido, Buenos Aires Province.

Established in 1838 in downtown Buenos Aires, it is the oldest school of British origin in South America.

The school offers early childhood, primary and secondary education and has a university founded in 1988.

The school's campus is located in Benavídez, Tigre Partido, inside the urban agglomeration known as Greater Buenos Aires.

The school was established in Argentina on September 1, 1838, by a group of Scottish immigrants who wanted to educate their children in their native language, culture and religion. At the beginning only girls were admitted, although the school accepted boys soon after.

The first location of the school was in Piedras 55, in downtown Buenos Aires. The institution was later moved to the neighbourhood of Constitución, where children from many nationalities attended. The chapel moved to the streets of Belgrano and Perú where it still remains.

In 1882, Scotsman Alexander Watson Hutton (considered the father of Argentine football), arrived to Buenos Aires after being hired by St. Andrew's as headmaster. Hutton encouraged the teaching of sports at the school, which conflicted with the position of the authorities of not considering sports as important as he did. Due to his disagreeing with the policies of the establishment, Hutton resigned one year later. After leaving St. Andrew's, Hutton founded his own institution, the Buenos Aires English High School, where he applied his ideas on the teaching of sports in Argentina.


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