King's-Edgehill School
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King's-Edgehill School |
|
Established | 1788 |
Type | Independent coeducational secondary |
Headmaster | David R. Penaluna |
Students | 340-366 (Approx. 225 Boarders, 120 Day Students) |
Grades | 7–12 |
Location | Windsor, Nova Scotia Canada |
Colors | red, blue |
Literary journal | From the insight out |
Website | www.kes.ns.ca |
King's-Edgehill School is a Canadian independent university preparatory school located in the town of Windsor, Nova Scotia.
King's-Edgehill is the oldest independent school in the Commonwealth outside the United Kingdom and traces its founding to 1788, when Loyalist from the American Revolutionary War founded King's Collegiate School
The genteel agricultural town of Windsor was chosen by Charles Inglis, first overseas Bishop of the Anglican Church, over the larger military centre and colonial capital of Halifax (60 km to the southeast) so "...that it be well away from taverns and houses of ill fame,".
In April 1789, King George III gave Royal Assent to the establishment of King's Collegiate School, as well as to the establishment of the University of King's College - the first such honour to be bestowed upon any school in the British Empire. It is also claimed that Prince Edward, Duke of Kent took an interest in King's Collegiate School and University of King's College while stationed in Halifax as Commander-in-Chief, British North America.
In June 1890, the Anglican Diocese of Nova Scotia decided to establish a girl's school in Windsor to complement King's Collegiate School. The Edgehill School opened in January 1891 and a new building began construction on the campus to house the institution the following June 23.
In 1923 a disastrous fire swept through the Windsor campus, causing irreparable damage to the main university buildings. With the encouragement of the Carnegie Foundation, which was promoting the consolidation of all Nova Scotian post-secondary institutions to Halifax around a nucleus formed by Dalhousie University, the University of King's College received funding to move into a newly built campus in Halifax. King's College remains an independent university, although its students enjoy affiliation privileges with Dalhousie. Its campus is located at the corner of Oxford Street and Cobourg Road, occupying the northwest corner of Dalhousie's Studley Campus.
Both King's Collegiate School and the newer Edgehill School remained on the Windsor campus and eventually expanded to include much of the 65-acre site, therefore better hosting the athletic tornaments which take place every year. In 1976 the governing bodies of both schools decided to amalgamate, and King's-Edgehill School was born. Over the previous five years there have been major renovations of the school, ranging from the addition of a floor to the girls dormitory to the construction of the Ted Canavan Athletic Center, complete with a pool, double gym and well-equiped excercise facilities, and the newly finished preforming arts center, built to host muscial performances and concerts.