Durban High School
Durban High School (D.H.S.) | |
---|---|
Location | |
Durban High School (D.H.S.) | |
125 St. Thomas Road Durban, Kwa-Zulu Natal South Africa | |
Coordinates | 29°50′40″S 30°59′52″E / 29.84444°S 30.99778°E |
Information | |
Type | All-Boys Public School (state) |
Motto |
Deo Fretus (In God We Trust) |
Established | 1866 |
Locale | Urban |
Head Master | Mr Leon Erasmus |
Grades | 8–12 |
Number of students | 1100 |
Houses | Swales, Grice, Langley, Campbell and Payne and Blackmore |
School colour(s) | Navy blue and Oxford gold |
Newspaper | The Herald |
Boarding houses | Blackmore |
Website |
www |
Durban High School is an all-boys public school in Durban, South Africa.
DHS opened its doors in 1866 in two rooms and with seven pupils in Smith Street. From there it moved to a disused granary in Cato Square in 1880, just after the Zulu War, and then to the Old Hospital on the foreshore. In 1895, it moved up onto the healthier Berea to its present site, where it flourished. The ten acres plot was granted to the School by the Durban Town Council. The first enrolled student was a boy called Eben Coates and he was also the first Head-boy. There is also a related primary school: Durban Preparatory High School. The school has approximately 1000 enrolled students, all boys, and includes a small boarding establishment and over 75 teachers. The headmaster is Mr. Leon Erasmus. It is the oldest standing school in Durban and one of the oldest in South Africa.
Houses
There are six houses:
- Swales – Old Gold
- Grice – Turquoise
- Langley – Red
- Campbell – Green
- Payne– Oxford Blue
- Blackmore (the boarders' house) – White
Blackmore House is a home for over 140 boys. The boys' needs are catered for by food provision and dormitories with a maximum of 6 boys per dorm. The boys can go home most weekends and return on Monday mornings.
Sports
A wide range of sports and activities are offered including climbing, golf, fishing, surfing, chess, football, basketball, and hardball as well as the more traditional athletics, cricket, hockey, and rugby which have been played at the school for over 100 years. The school has produced over 125 international sportsmen in sports ranging from rugby and cricket to golf, badminton, baseball, surfing and powerlifting. Countries represented include France, New Zealand, England, Scotland and the USA. More than 30 old boys have played international cricket, six of whom were Wisden Cricketers of the Year. Five old boys played in the 1960 Lords test against England and four in the first two tests against Australia in 1969/70.
Notable people
Staff
- Robert Russell, Scottish born educator and first Head Master (1866–1875).
- Col A C Martin Headmaster(1943-1952). German prisoner of war for first two years of his appointment.
- Izak Van Heerden. School, Natal, Springbok and Argentina rugby coach. POW in Germany with another DHS teacher, Bill Payn. Taught at DHS for 39 years. Izak died at the school in 1973.
- Bill Payne, Springbok rugby. Taught at the school from 1915-1953. Bill fought in both World Wars and was awarded the Military Medal in 1941, aged 47,while in action in the Western Desert. Prisoner of war in Germany with fellow DHS teacher Izak Van Heerden. Ran the 90 km Comrades Marathon in rugby boots. Provincial cricket, baseball, athletics and boxing.
- L.C.W. Theobald, Latin Master and school and SA School's cricket coach. Master-in-charge of cricket 1949-1967.Coached eight SA cricketers including Barry Richards, Lee Irvine, Hugh Tayfield and Trevor Goddard. First XI cricket.
- 'Skonk' Nicholson,renowned schools rugby coach.Coached seven Springboks including Joel Stransky and Butch James, both world cup winning fly-halves when he coached the first XV at Maritzburg College. Coach of 14 unbeaten College teams. In his 35 seasons in charge of the College First XV his teams established a playing record of, Played 504, Won 403, Drew 49 and Lost 52. DHS First XV rugby, First XI cricket and Head Prefect. Natal School's Rugby.[1]
- Aubrey Samuel Langley, Headmaster. Introduced rugby and established the Durban Preparatory High School(DPHS) which has produced 90 international sportsmen.
- Tony Human, the school's longest serving teacher. 'AJ' has taught at the school for 52 years(1965-2016).
Alumni
Politics
- Dr Ernest George Jansen MP, Governor-General of the Union of South Africa (1950–1959).
- Sir Gavyn Arthur. Former Lord Mayor of London. Another DHS boy to end up at Harrow School. Appointed a High Court Judge in 2008.
- Sir Albert Robinson MP. Read law at Stellenbosch and Cambridge universities. Served as High Commissioner to Britain for the Central African Federation.
- Alec Erwin, MP. Minister of Trade and Industry(1996-2004). President of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development(1996-2000).
- Senator Charles Clarkson OBE. SA Minister of the Interior (now known as Home Affairs) 1943-1948.
- Leif Egeland, MP. Rhodes Scholar. Ambassador to Sweden and the Hague. SA High Commissioner in London. Dux 1918.
- Rupert Ellis-Brown, Mayor of Durban. Represented SA in Sailing at the 1924 Summer Olympics – Monotype (Paris) and in Sailing at the 1928 Summer Olympics (Amsterdam).
- Radclyffe Cadman,[2] MP. Leader of The New Republic Party. Administrator of Natal. MA(Cantab), LL.B. Royal Navy in WW2.
- John Lloyd. Former Labour Party Leader, Exeter City Council UK. Barrister and anti- apartheid campaigner.
- Miles Cadman MP.
- Alan John Oxley, South African Ambassador to Australia(1977-1983).
- Senator Denis Gem Shepstone, Administrator of Natal Province. South African delegate to General Assembly of United Nations.
- Townley Williams, MP.
- Roger Hulley MP.
- Dr Vernon Shearer, MP. Mayor of Durban.
- Nigel Wood MP.
- Graham Mackeurtan MP. King's Counsel and Historian.First in the Final Law Examinations of The Inner Temple, London. First XI cricket.
Academics
- Sir Aaron Klug, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1982. Scientific advisor to the British Government. President of The Royal Society, governor at the Scripps Research Institute, USA. Dux 1941
- Dr Trevor Wadley, invented the Tellurometer in 1957, the Wadley Loop and an Ionosonde. Awarded the Frank P. Brown Medal in 1970.
- Dr Percy Deift. Professor of Mathematics at Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University. Awarded The George Polya Prize, 1998. Named a Guggenheim Fellow in 1999. Ph.D-Princeton University. Dux 1962
- Dr Mervyn Susser, member Royal College of Physicians(Edinburgh). Sergievsky Professor of Epidemiology at Columbia University New York,USA.
- Thomas John I'Anson Bromwich. Professor of Mathematics, Queen's College, Galway, Ireland. Fellow of the Royal Society. Senior Wrangler, Cambridge 1897.
- Professor Dudley Goodhead, OBE. Director of the Medical Research Council's Radiation and Genome Stability Unit, Harwell UK. D.Phil, Oxford. Chairman of CERRIE. Dux 1956. Presented with the Gray Medal in 2011,The Weiss Medal (UK), Failla Medal (USA), Bacq & Alexander Medal (Europe). Scientific Advisor to the British Government.
- Dr Alan Gelb, Rhodes Scholar, Director of the World Bank Washington D.C. D.Phil, Oxford.
- Professor Jacques Joubert, Professor of Neurology UNISA( Africa's biggest University),University of Melbourne and Royal Melbourne Hospital.
- Professor Peter Disler. Professor of Medicine Monash University, Australia. Senior lecturer Groote Schuur Hospital and University of Cape Town. Dux 1964.
- Dr David Levy, Professor of Electrical and Information Engineering, Sydney University and Harbin University, China.
- Dr Alistair McEwan Lamont, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Pretoria.
- Professor Nigel Blamey , affiliated with University of Aberdeen (Scotland), Brock University (Canada) and New Mexico Tech (USA). Published in Nature on Methane in Martian Meteorites. World leader in quantitative fluid inclusion gas analysis by mass spectrometry.
- Dr Ian MacKenzie. Ph.D McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Professor of Physics.
- Professor Peter de Villiers, Smith College USA. Rhodes Scholar. British Decathlon Champion 1969 and British Universities Champion 1970.
- Dr John Bradford, Order of Canada 2013. Professor of Forensic Psychiatry University of Ottawa and Queen's University, Canada. Victoria Jubilee Medal.
- Dr David Bourne. Switched from a career in nuclear physics to become a chief research officer in Infectious Disease Epidemiology Unit at the University of Cape Town.
- Dr Ian Robertson, US sociologist and author. Former NUSAS president and anti-apartheid campaigner. Studied at Natal, Oxford, Cambridge and Harvard universities. NUSAS President, banned for inviting Senator Robert Kennedy to South Africa.
- Professor Phillip Tobias, palaeoanthropologist. Doctorates in medicine, genetics and palaeoanthropology. Nominated three times for a Nobel Prize. Dux 1942.
- Dr David Papineau, King's College London. Professor of the Philosophy of Science. Ph.D-Cambridge. Dux 1963.
- Dr Jeffrey Greenstein, neurologist. Head of Multiple Sclerosis Research Institute, Philadelphia, USA. Professor of Neurology, Temple University School of Medicine.
- Professor David Brokensha, Universities of Ghana and California. International anthropologist and author. German prisoner of war (1942-1945).
- Professor David Henderson-Smart, Sydney University. Order of Australia 2006. Director of Neonatal Intensive Care at King George V Hospital, Sydney.
- Professor Geoffrey Smithers, Rhodes Scholar. World authority on Middle English, King's College, Oxford and Durham University.
- Dr E V Axelson. Professor of History, University of Cape Town. Discovered the Diaz Cross in 1937.
- Nils Eckhoff. Senior Surgeon at Guy's Hospital and consulting surgeon of Harvard University. Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, London.
- Tim Couzens (1944–2016) was a South African literary and social historian, and travel writer, employed in the Graduate School for Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of the Witwatersrand.
Business
- Stephen Bradley Saad, founder and CEO of Aspen Pharmacare, Africa's largest pharmaceutical manufacturer. First XV rugby.
- Graeme Robertson, British direct marketing guru. The Graeme Robertson Trust is named in his honour. First XV rugby.
- Bronek Masojada, Rhodes Scholar. CEO of Hiscox Insurance. Past president of Insurance Institute of London, Deputy Chairman of LLoyd's of London(2001-2007).
- Stephen Mulholland, CEO Times Media Limited(Formerly SAAN) 1986-1992. CEO Fairfax Group(Australia)1992-1996. Two time All American Swimming Champion and South African national champion.
- Mick Goss, attorney and advocate and owner of Summerhill Stud. Natal School's rugby.
- Christopher Seabrooke, Chairman of the South African State Theatre, the largest theatre complex in Africa.
- Alan J Hellman-founder and original CEO of Game Stores, now Africa's largest discount retailer.
- Alex Ritchie, Hot air balloon engineer, innovator and businessman who saved Richard Branson's life.
- Tony Norton, Rhodes Scholar. First Executive President of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, Director-General, Council of Southern African Bankers. Oxford Blue in Athletics, Modern Pentathlon and Swimming.
Past presidents of NUSAS
- Phillip V. Tobias, 1948 President of the National Union of South African Students. Professor of Palaeoanthropology at Wits.
- Karel Tip, Senior Council (SA) and Queen's Counsel (Britain).
- Charles Nupen, attorney. Chief Technical Advisor to the International Labour Organisation.
- Ian Robertson. Banned for inviting Senator Robert Kennedy to address a NUSAS meeting.
- Dr Duncan Innes.
Judiciary
- Justice A E Carlisle.
- Justice Leo Caney.
- Justice Neville (G N) Holmes, Judge of the Appellate Division.
- Justice Ramon Nigel Leon.
- Justice B D Burne.
- Justice David Friedman, Dux 1952.
- Justice Brian Law.
- Justice Alan Magid.
- Justice Jonathan Heher, Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal, formerly the Appellate Division.
- Justice Malcolm Wallis, Judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal and honorary Professor of Law in the University of KwaZulu-NataL.
- Sir Gavyn Arthur appointed a High Court Judge in 2008. Clive Shenton QC, Scottish Sheriff.
Military
- Major Edwin Swales. Victoria Cross, Distinguished Flying Cross. SAAF and RAF. Pathfinder Master Bomber.
- Sq Ldr 'Chris' Le Roux, Royal Air Force, Battle of Britain. Distinguished Flying Cross and two Bars. His squadron wounded Field Marshall Erwin Rommel when his car overturned during an aerial attack just after D-Day. First XV rugby.
- Wing-Commander David Haysom, DSO, DFC. RAF, Battle of Britain.
- Sq Ldr W S Bowyer, RAF, Battle of Britain.
- Paddy Roberts. Lawyer and WW 2 Royal Air Force (RAF) pilot. Commercial BOAC pilot after the war. Turned to songwriting and singing, writing numerous UK hits and film scores. Won five Ivor Novello Awards.
- Michael Turner, WW2 RAF Pilot. Became a stage, television and film actor in Britain after the war.
- Major E C Saville, SAAF. DFC and Bar and American DFC.
- Lt-Col J F O Davis SAAF. Killed in action in Korean War. DFC and Bar, Distinguished Flying Cross(American).
- Lt Martin Grunder, SAAF 2 Squadron. Killed in action in Korea, September 1951.
- Sergeant Peter Keogh, Military Cross(2010). Royal Irish Regiment.
- Major Clive Shenton, Black Watch and Parachute Regiment. Left the Army and studied law at Edinburgh University. Admitted to the Scottish Bar(1975) and English Bar and became a Queen's Counsel in 1990. Distinguished Service Cross.
- Lt.Col Wilfred Clark, 15 and 31 Squadrons,SAAF. Served in North Africa, Malta, Italy, Poland and Germany during WW II.
- Lt.-Col E M Baker, SAAF, DSO, DFC.
- Lt. Guy Brokensha, Distinguished Service Cross, Fleet Air Arm (888 Squadron).
- Lt. H E Towersey, MC and B.E.M. First XV rugby and First XI.
- Captain W L O Moon, SAAF, DFC and Bar.
- Lt.-Col J A C Rademan, SAAF, DSO and DFC.Head of Civil Aviation in RSA after WW2.
- Lt.-Comdr. J E H McBeath, Royal Navy,DSO, OM.
- Sq.Ldr. 'Paddy' Hopkins, RAF Coastal Command. AFC and DFC.
- Major G R O Edwards, DSO and Bar.
- Lt-Col.A Winter Evans, DSO,DCM.
- Lt. J F Britz, Royal Marines, Military Medal. SA Boxing. First XV rugby.
- Captain L M Jacobs,Royal Durban Light Infantry.
250 old boys died, and more than 2000 were injured in both World Wars. One Victoria Cross (VC), 27 Distinguished Flying Crosses (DFC), 21 Military Crosses (MC), 10 Military Medals (MM) and 8 Distinguished Service Orders (DSO) were awarded to old boys in these and subsequent conflicts. In the battle of Delville Wood in 1916, 12 old boys were killed, 9 wounded and 3 were taken prisoner.
Arts and media
- Roy Campbell, poet, author and adventurer.
- Fernando Pessoa, Portuguese poet, translator, publisher and philosopher. Poet Laureate of Portugal.
- Marc Raubenheimer, concert pianist.
- Noel Langley novelist and playwright. Wrote the film scenario for The Wizard of Oz.
- Jack Cope, author.
- Marius Gabriel Cipolla novelist, writes as Marius Gabriel. Has written numerous romance and mystery novels. Wrote and illustrated the children's book Smartypig.
- Victor Stiebel. London fashion designer. Studied architecture at Jesus College, Cambridge.
- Howard Carpendale. 'Schlager' singer, sold over 25 million records in German speaking countries. Won Goldene Europa Award in 1978 and 1987. First XV rugby,First XI cricket and Natal School's athletics.
- Laurence Gandar, editor Rand Daily Mail. Anti-apartheid campaigner. World Press Freedom Hero(2010). School Athletics, Natal Athletics.
- Tony Heard. Anti-Apartheid campaigner and editor the Cape Times. Special Advisor to the South African Government.
- Michael Turner WW2 RAF pilot. Became a stage, television and film actor in Britain.
- Paddy Roberts, RAF pilot. Commercial BOAC pilot after the war. Turned to songwriting and singing, writing numerous UK hits and film scores. Won five Ivor Novello Awards.
- Robert Pike Daniel, Hollywood actor.
- Conrad Arthur Skinner, author. Wrote under the pseudonym Michael Maurice. Cox to the Cambridge eight for three years (1910-1912).
- Paul Herman Robinson.Cartoonist with the Natal Mercury in Durban.
- Anthony Bullimore, Planet Cake, a reality television show in Australia.
- Alan Crump, Professor of Fine Arts, University of the Witwatersrand. First XV, Athletics team.
- Peter Sacks, Rhodes Scholar. American author and artist.
- Austin Ferraz, editor Sunday Mail, Salisbury (now Harare).
- Peter Court, author of Hear the Ringdove Call and A Man Alone.
- Dr Mike Kirkwood, author, poet and anti-apartheid campaigner. Editor of Bolt, Ravan Press and Staffrider. First XV rugby.
- Ross Garland, Advocate and film producer (including Spud ) and Rhodes Scholar. Won the Golden Bear for best film at the Berlin International Film Festival(2005). First XI cricket.
- Robert Boake, Location Manager ( Game of Thrones), musician and film score writer and producer.
RHODES SCHOLARS: John Nicolson 1920, Leif Egeland 1924, Geoffrey Smithers 1930, Tony Norton 1959, Rory Donnellan 1962, Peter De Villiers 1967, Alan Gelb 1969, Peter Sacks 1973, Bronek Masojeda 1985, Ross Garland 1997.
Sports
Cricket
All represented South Africa except where noted:[lower-alpha 1]
- Hashim Amla. SA test captain. World Cup 2007, 2011 and 2015. His 311 not out in the first test at The Oval in 2012 is the highest by a SA batsman in test cricket. Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2013. Quickest SA batsman to score 20 test centuries and the fastest batsman from all countries to score 6000 runs in ODIs.
- Lance Klusener, "Zulu", ICC 1999 World Cup Man of the Tournament despite SA not playing in the final, Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2000. Took 8/64 in India's second innings on debut in Kolkata in 1996. Klusener's World Cup batting average of 124 is the highest for any batsman and 16 higher than the second best.
- Barry Richards. Broke Don Bradman's record for the number of runs in a season playing for South Australia, 1970/71. Scored 325 runs not out in a single day against Western Australia. In ten first class matches he scored 1538 runs at an average of 109.86. Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1969. Scored 80 first class centuries. His average of 79.14 in World Series Cricket was 23 higher than the second highest average. In his first season in County Cricket he scored 2395 runs, more than anyone else in the country.Test umpire Dickie Bird rated him the best batsman he ever saw. Don Bradman selected Richards as an opening batsman in his World XI. Named 'Leading cricketer in the world', for 1973 by Wisden.
- Hugh Tayfield. Took 9/113 in England's second innings at The Wanderers in 1957. Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1956. Bowled 137 consecutive balls in the Durban Test in 1957 against England without conceding a run. This is still a test record. Wisden considers his 9/113 the finest performance by a bowler in test matches. First XV rugby.[lower-alpha 2]
- Jon Kent.
- Nummy Dean, SA test captain.
- Nevil Lindsay.
- Geoff Griffin. Only South African to take a hat-trick in a test match (Lords 1960). First XV rugby, Natal School's Athletics,Natal U19 rugby, Rhodesia hockey. [lower-alpha 2]
- Trevor Goddard. SA test captain and opening bat and Test cricket's most economical bowler (av 1.64/over). Provincial football. [lower-alpha 2]
- Richard Snell. World Cup 1992. First old boy to represent South Africa after the country's re-admission to international competition in 1992.
- Lee Irvine Highest First XI batting average at DHS in a season. Scored 1310 runs at an average of 68.95 in 21 innings( Wade Wingfield scored 1510 runs in 1995). School First XV rugby and School Athletics.
- Tyron Henderson, First XV rugby.
- Horace Chapman.
- Eric Dalton. SA tennis and SA golf also.
- Mike Rindel. Gold medal, 1998 Commonwealth Games.
- Jack Siedle. Holds the record, set with another old boy JFW Nicolson, of the highest opening stand in provincial cricket in South Africa of 424 runs. Shared in a 260 run opening partnership with Bruce Mitchell against England at Newlands (1930/1).
- Imraan Khan. Opened the innings in the third test against Australia in Cape Town in the absence of SA captain Graeme Smith (2009). Not the Pakistan captain.
- George Shepstone, Maritzburg College, DHS and Repton School.
- Denis Dyer.
- Colin Wesley. First XV rugby.[lower-alpha 2]
- Dennis Gamsy,wicketkeeper. First XV rugby.
- Jonathan Fellows-Smith. Rugby Blue, Oxford University(1950s). [lower-alpha 2]
- Richard Dumbrill
- Dale Benkenstein. Gold medal, Commonwealth Games, Malaysia 1998. Michaelhouse school also.
- D P Conyngham.
- Sid Pegler
- Herbie Taylor. SA captain. Attended the Prep school(D.P.H.S.), when it was part of DHS, and Michaelhouse. Military Cross in WW1. Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1925.
- JFW Nicolson, Rhodes Scholar. Holds the record, set with another old boy, I J 'Jack' Siedle, of 424 runs for the first wicket in provincial cricket in SA. Nicolson made 252 not out. Head Boy, captain of cricket and rugby.
- JAJ Christy.
- V C Robbins. Played for South Africa against Lord Hawke's English team They were not test matches.
- Bertram Cooley, chosen for the 1901 tour to England but did not play a test match.
- Nick Compton (represented England). Toured England with the DHS first XI captained by Hashim Amla. Averaged 99.60 for Somerset in county cricket in 2012. Tests for England beginning 2012. Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2013. Hilton College and Harrow School (England) also.
- George Gordon Campbell, Scotland 1921.
Rugby
- Greg Rawlinson, New Zealand – All Blacks, Position – Lock/second row.
- Alistair Hargreaves, South Africa- Lock. Captained the SA U19 team that won the U19 World Cup in 2005. Captain of Saracens in English Premiership .
- BJ Botha. South Africa – Springboks, Position – Prop. World Cup Winner, Rugby World Cup 2007.Kloof High School also.
- Antonie Claassen, France- flank/8th man. SA U19. Head Prefect. His father Wynand captained the Springboks.
- Andrew Aitken, South Africa. Flanker and 8th man. The Springboks won all 7 internationals in which he played in 1997/8.
- Neville 'Jacko' Tod, South Africa-wing(1928).
- Graham 'Basher' Downes-USA Eagles. Position- prop.
- Matt Alexander, USA. Scored 286 points for the USA at fly-half.
- Guy Manson-Bishop, Lock/8th man. British Barbarians, South Africa XV, Sale and Leicester Tigers and Western Province. First XI cricket.
- Garth Williamson. Natal scrum half in the team that drew 6-6 with the 1960 All Blacks and beat Australia 14-13 in 1963. Junior Springbok.
- Alan Temple-Jones,bronze medal 2017 Rio Olympics(fitness trainer of the Blitzbokke).
Athletics
- Clarence Oldfield, Silver medal 4 × 400 m relay in 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium.
- Sydney Atkinson. Gold medal 110m hurdles, 1928 Summer Olympic Games in Amsterdam, silver in the same event in 1924 Olympics in Paris.
- Peter de Villiers. Rhodes Scholar. British champion in the Decathlon at the AAA Championships in 1969 and British Universities Champion in 1970 when he broke the South African decathlon record. Professor of Psychology, Smith College, Massachusetts, USA. Head Prefect.
TRIATHLON
- Henri Schoeman. Bronze medal in 2016 Rio Olympics. Oakridge College also.
Surfing, swimming, lifesaving and canoeing
- Shaun Tomson, 1977 IPS World Champion Surfer.
- Travis Logie, 2002 ISA World Champion Surfer.
- Jason Ribbink surfer. Ranked #2 longboard surfer in the world in 2001. Captain of the victorious SA team at the 2002 ISA World Games.
- David Weare, international surfer. The All African Champion Surfer in 2004 and 2008.
- Leandro Jorge. Swam for Mocambique in the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta.
- Byron Jeffers. Youngest swimmer to medal, aged 14, at the South African Senior Nationals. Represented SA at Commonwealth Youth Games in Scotland 2000.Three Africa age group records and eight British age group records.First Team All-American in 200m free relay, 2003/4.
- Hank McGregor. Seven time world K-1 Marathon Champion and winner of 10 Berg River Canoe Marathons (raced over a distance of 240 kilometres).
- Alan Burt, SA Lifesaving. School first XV rugby.
- T.Scott, SA Lifesaving.
- C.Murray, SA Lifesaving.
- Guy Nothard, SA Lifesaving.
- R Coetzee, SA Lifesaving.
- T Dumas, SA Lifesaving.
- B Edwards, SA Lifesaving.
- Lester Kitto, SA Lifesaving. School first XV rugby.
- M Hardaker. SA Lifesaving.
- J Zwart, SA Lifesaving.
- Michael Bolstridge, SA Swimming. Chosen to swim at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal (1976). The team was banned from participating.
- G May, SA Swimming.
- D Collopy, SA Water-polo and Lifesaving.
- Colin Woodcock, SA Water-polo. Head Prefect and Natal School’s rugby.
- Merlin Fredericks, SA Swimming.
- Stephen Mulholland, SA Swimming and All American swimming champion.
Golf
- Rory Sabbatini. Won the World Cup of Golf in 2003 partnered by Trevor Immelman. Finished second in the 2007 Masters Tournament. Represented SA in World Cup from 2002 to 2009 and Presidents Cup(2007).
- Derek James. Represented SA in the Eisenhower Trophy in 1982.
- Mickey Janks. Won SA Open in 1948 as an amateur, only 6 amateurs have accomplished that. Won SA Amateur 1952. Represented SA against Great Britain in 1946.
- Eric Dalton. Won the SA Amateur Championship (1950) and Represented SA at the Commonwealth Tournament at St Andrews in 1954.
Tennis
- Vernon Kirby, SA Davis Cup. Runner-up 1931 and 1937 French Open, Men's Doubles. First XI cricket.
- David Adams, SA Davis Cup. Won two Grand Slam mixed doubles titles.
- John Yuill, Professional tennis player. 1974 SA Davis Cup Team.
- Victor Gauntlett, SA Tennis.
- C J J Robbins, SA Tennis.
- E Getaz, SA Tennis.
- J Hendrie, SA Tennis.
- Eric Dalton, SA Davis Cup. SA Cricket and Golf also.
Hockey
- Geoff Abbott, SA.
- Mike Cullen, SA. Judged the Best Player, 2001 Men's Hockey Champions Challenge.
- Grant Smith, SA.
- S de Wet, SA, 1948/9.
- B Pearse, SA.
- P Woods, SA.
- Shaun Davenhill, SA.
- Richard Curtis,SA.
- Grant Robertson, SA.
Other Sports
- Rory Donnellan, Rhodes Scholar. SA Equestrian. First XI cricket.
- David Uniacke, SA Basketball.
- Lt.J F Britz, Military Medal. SA Boxing.
- Dr Garth Allardice, centre half, Kaizer Chiefs Football Club. First XV, School Athletics, Natal School's Football, Rugby and Athletics.
- E J W Browne, SA Rowing.
- Reneshan Naidoo, SA Badminton (2012) while still at school.
- Dr Richard Venniker, silver medal in ICF Canoe Marathon Masters World Cup(2014).
- Mike Sellick-SA Casting. First XV rugby.
- Rupert Ellis-Brown, represented SA in sailing in 1924 and 1928 Olympic Games.
- D Napier-SA Baseball.
- J. Banks-SA Shooting.
- Dave Hudson, yachtsman. Represented SA in the Admiral's Cup (1975), the Olympic Games (1992), the ISAF Games (1994) and in 14 World Championships between 1968 and 2009.
- L.A. Evans-SA Yachting.
- L.N. Horsfield- SA Yachting.
- M. Statham, SA Yachting (1995, 1998, 1999)
- Robin Lowe, centre half, Durban United and Addington football clubs. Killed in a motor accident in 1970. SA Footballer of the Year, 1966.
- Johnny Sinclair, Durban United footballer(midfielder).
- Gareth Irvine, Durban United goalkeeper. First XV rugby.
- Eric Dalton-SA Golf, Tennis and Cricket.
Notes and references
- ↑ {{Cite web
- Lt.Col A C Martin MC, Headmaster 1943-1952(German prisoner of war during the first two years of his appointment).
- L.C.W. Theobald, Latin Master and school and SA School's cricket coach. Master-in-charge of cricket 1949-1967.Coached eight SA cricketers including Barry Richards, Lee Irvine, Hugh Tayfield and Trevor Goddard. First XI cricket.
- Col A C Martin Headmaster. German prisoner of war for first two years of his appointment.
- Bill Payne, Springbok rugby. Bill taught at the school from 1915-1953. Bill fought in both World Wars and was awarded the Military Medal while serving in the Western Desert in 1943.
- ↑ "Radclyffe Cadman.". The Telegraph. 10 November 2011. Retrieved 2015-05-27.