Australian National Museum of Education
Building 5, Level A, Room 5A4
麻豆传媒
anme@canberra.edu.au
+61 02 6201 2473
UC OPEN DAY FEST
Sat 20 Sept, 9am - 3pm
Albert Weigall is best remembered as one of the finest and longest-serving grammar school headmasters of the nineteenth century in Australia. He was headmaster of Sydney Grammar School from 1867 to 1912. At the time of his appointment, he was also one of the youngest grammar school headmasters to be appointed at the age of 26. He was the second headmaster of Sydney Grammar School which was established in 1854 but opened for enrolment in 1857. As one of Sydney鈥檚 most prestigious schools, it had close links with the recently established University of Sydney, as a secondary school preparation institution for those boys proposing to enter the professions via a university education.
Weigall was born in England in 1840 and attended Macclesfield Grammar School, from which he entered the University of Oxford where he graduated with a second-class honours degree. He emigrated to Australia to take up the position of classics master at Scotch College Melbourne where he remained for three years, before being offered the headmastership at Sydney Grammar School. He developed this school along the lines of the Thomas Arnold educational philosophy, which championed the values of scholarship, personal industry and effort, and the 鈥渄uty of honest service鈥. During his tenure as Headmaster greatly improved the teaching standards expected in a grammar school, and he widened the curriculum beyond the traditional 鈥渃lassics鈥 emphasis of the old traditional 鈥済reat public schools鈥 of England. He placed great emphasis on the development of 鈥渟chool spirit鈥 or what we would now define as aspects of 鈥渟chool climate鈥.
Weigall died in 1912. Turney and Burns sum up Weigall鈥檚 contribution with the following statement; 鈥渁s a result of his dedicated efforts, the Sydney Grammar School emerged as one of the leading Australian secondary schools. Not only had he made substantial improvements in the School鈥檚 scholarship standards and the scope and purpose of its curriculum, but he had done much to develop a school tone and corporate spirit designed to have a powerful influence in the lives of the pupils.鈥
A more detailed account of Weigall鈥檚 headmastership may be found in C. Turney鈥檚 Pioneers of Australian Education, chapter 5. Also, a contemporary biography of Weigall was published by M.W. MacCallum soon after he died, titled, In Memory of Albert Bythesea Weigall, Headmaster of Sydney Grammar School, 1866-1912, (1913).
Australian National Museum of Education
Building 5, Level A, Room 5A4
麻豆传媒
anme@canberra.edu.au
+61 02 6201 2473
UC acknowledges the Ngunnawal people, traditional custodians of the lands where Bruce campus is situated. We wish to acknowledge and respect their continuing culture and the contribution they make to the life of Canberra and the region. We also acknowledge all other First Nations Peoples on whose lands we gather.