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St Catherine's School, Sydney

St Catherine's School
St Catherine's School crest. Source: www.stcaths.nsw.edu.au (St Catherine's website)
Location
Waverley, New South Wales
Australia
Coordinates 33°54′15″S 151°15′19″E / 33.90417°S 151.25528°E / -33.90417; 151.25528Coordinates: 33°54′15″S 151°15′19″E / 33.90417°S 151.25528°E / -33.90417; 151.25528
Information
Type Private, day & boarding
Motto Latin: In Christo Thesauri Sapientiae Et Scientiae
("In Christ are the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge")
Denomination Anglican
Established 1856
Founder Jane Sophia Barker
Chairman Rev. Simon Roberts
Headmistress Julie Townsend
Staff ~120
Gender Girls
Enrolment ~1000(K–12)
Colour(s) Yellow, Red and Blue             
Website

St Catherine's School (commonly referred to as St Cath's) is an independent, Anglican, day and boarding school for girls, located in Waverley, an eastern suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Established in 1856 as a school for the daughters of clergy, St Catherine's is the oldest Anglican girls' school in Australia. It is also the oldest independent girls' school in Australia. It is a non-selective school, and currently caters for approximately 1000 girls from Kindergarten to Year 12, including 70 boarders.

The school is affiliated with the Alliance of Girls’ Schools Australasia (AGSA), the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA), the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA), the Australian Boarding Schools' Association (ABSA), and is a founding member of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls' Schools (AHIGS).

St Catherine's has been reviewed by the Good Schools Guide International.

St Catherine's School traces its origins to 1855, when Mrs Jane Barker, wife of Frederic Barker, second Archbishop of Sydney, decided to establish a school for the daughters of the clergy. Barker and her husband had travelled throughout New South Wales, and realised that the poor stipends of the clergy in country areas meant that their daughters could not benefit from a good education. Within five months, Barker had raised enough money to secure a premises in Point Piper Road (now Jersey Road), Edgecliff, and had hired Ms Loftus to run the St Catherine's Clergy Daughters School. Barker wished for her school to be modelled on Casterton School, the school attended by the Brontë sisters, who were themselves the daughters of a poor clergyman. The Clergy Daughters School was officially opened in its temporary location on 5 March 1856.


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