Harold Cressy High School is a secondary school in
District Six of
Cape Town in South Africa. It was founded in January 1951 as the Cape Town Secondary School. The school has played a substantial role in South African history during the
apartheid period and the building is identified as an important landmark.
History
The school's site has a long association with education. In 1934 the Jewish community built Hope Lodge Primary School on this site. Later the first tertiary education facility for
coloured
Coloureds ( af, Kleurlinge or , ) refers to members of multiracial ethnic communities in Southern Africa who may have ancestry from more than one of the various populations inhabiting the region, including African, European, and Asian. South ...
students was established here. It was called the Hewat Training College and it was still training teachers here in 1961;
[ but it has since been renamed the College of Cape Town and is now based in Crawford.
This school was founded in January 1951 as the Cape Town Secondary School but it changed its name in 1953. In the beginning the school had three teachers supervising two year seven classes and one year eight. The building was a wooden framed fabrication with three classrooms in the grounds of the college.][Heritage Impact Assessment]
Quahnita Samie and Constance Pansegrouw, 2014 for Harold Cressy Alumni Association, retrieved 15 August 2014
The school is named for Harold Cressy
Harold Cressy (1 February 1889 – 23 August 1916) was a South African headteacher and activist. He was the first Coloured person to gain a degree in South Africa and he worked to improve education for non-white South Africans. He co-founded a ...
who was the first coloured man to gain a Bachelor of Arts degree in South Africa.[City School turns 100]
iol.co.za, January 2012, retrieved August 2014
Conflict
On 11 February 1966, P. W. Botha declared that District Six was to be emptied to make way for white residents under the Group Areas Act. However, like nearby Trafalgar High School, Harold Cressy High School refused to move.[Trafalgar High School, Cape Town, marks 100 years]
South African History Online, retrieved 11 August 2014 60,000 people were moved from District Six by 1982 and they were rehoused in the Cape Flats some distance away.[
The political instability has frequently affected the school, particularly during the uprisings of 1976, 1980 and 1985. During 1985 the disruption was acknowledged when the school decided to completely abandon the normal curriculum and instead devised lessons based around the political struggle at the time. The school acknowledged that educational reform was insufficient and larger changes were required to transform South African society. The authorities replied by suspending teachers and the imprisoning the chair of the parent-teacher association; two teachers were sent to prison.][ Helen Kies, who had recently retired after 35 years of teaching at the school, was imprisoned for a month in the belief that she may have been involved in organising the school boycotts that year.][
]
Today
The school has been frequently under-resourced and for many years it has had no school hall, meaning that students sit on concrete floors in open space for school assemblies. The existing space allows 250 children to assemble, but the school enrolment is over 700.[Harold Cressy High School]
, Heritage Portal, retrieved 16 August 2014 Recently the school's alumni association organised plans to help a school hall to be constructed.[
The school is identified for playing a substantial role in South African history during the apartheid period when segregation and the forced removal of whole communities was possible. The building has Grade 2 heritage significance and it is also identified as an important local landmark.][
In 2010 the school set up a twinning relationship with Nova Hreod Academy in ]Swindon
Swindon () is a town and unitary authority with Borough status in the United Kingdom, borough status in Wiltshire, England. As of the 2021 Census, the population of Swindon was 201,669, making it the largest town in the county. The Swindon un ...
, UK, so that their students can gain from studying the history of apartheid together. The following year David de Storie and Zaida Petersen from the school visited Nova Hreod Academy to exchange ideas about teaching science and maths. The plan was to get year 8 students at the school to compare their viewpoints of their carbon footprint
A carbon footprint is the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by an individual, event, organization, service, place or product, expressed as carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e). Greenhouse gases, including the carbon-containing gases carbo ...
and their environment with students in Swindon.
Provincial Heritage Site
Harold Cressy High School was declared a provincial heritage site in September 2014 by Heritage Western Cape in terms of Section 27 of the National Heritage Resources Act. This gives the site Grade II status and provides the site with protection under South African heritage law.
The school displays heritage significance in terms of its intrinsic historical, social, environmental, cultural and political value. The school represents the resistance to apartheid laws and is associated with the public memory of forced removals, segregation and academic excellence.
Notable alumni
* Mohamed Adhikari
Mohamed Adhikari is a professor of history and author of several books on both Coloured identity and politics in South Africa as well as on settler colonialism and genocide. He is a professor at the University of Cape Town. He was born in Cape To ...
– professor at the University of Cape Town
* Helen Kies – activist and former teacher at the school[Helen Kies]
SAHistory Online, retrieved 17 August 2014
* Rhoda Kadalie
Rhoda Kadalie (22 September 1953 – 16 April 2022) was a South African activist and academic. She was a member of the South African Human Rights Commission from 1995 to 1997. She also founded the Gender Equity Unit at the University of the Wes ...
– the founder of the Gender Equity Unit at University of Western Cape (UWC)
* Edward Kieswetter
Edward is an English given name. It is derived from the Anglo-Saxon name ''Ēadweard'', composed of the elements '' ēad'' "wealth, fortune; prosperous" and '' weard'' "guardian, protector”.
History
The name Edward was very popular in Anglo-Sax ...
– Group CEO of Alexander Forbes Limited;[ Commissioner South African Revenue Service
* Trevor Manuel – South African cabinet minister][
* ]Anthony Figaji
Anthony or Antony is a masculine given name, derived from the '' Antonii'', a ''gens'' ( Roman family name) to which Mark Antony (''Marcus Antonius'') belonged. According to Plutarch, the Antonii gens were Heracleidae, being descendants of Anton ...
- President of the International Neurotrauma Society
References
{{Cape Town, education
Schools in Cape Town
1951 establishments in South Africa
Educational institutions established in 1951