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Bishop's College, Colombo

Bishop's College in Colombo, Sri Lanka, is a private girls' school founded by the Anglican Church of Ceylon in February 1875.

Bishop's College, Colombo
College Crest
Address
15 Boyd Place


Sri Lanka
Coordinates6°54′52″N 79°51′12″E / 6.9144343°N 79.8533641°E / 6.9144343; 79.8533641Coordinates: 6°54′52″N 79°51′12″E / 6.9144343°N 79.8533641°E / 6.9144343; 79.8533641
Information
School typePrivate Private Day and Boarding
MottoLatin: Non Sibi Sed Omnibus
(Not for self, but for all)
Religious affiliation(s)Christianity
DenominationAnglican
FoundedFebruary 1875; 147 years ago (1875-02)
FounderJames Chapman
School districtColombo
ChairpersonDushantha Lakshman Rodrigo
PrincipalChemali G. Herath
Grades1 - 14
Nursery
GenderFemale (with males in the Nursery)
Enrollment1,900
Language
Campus typeUrban
Houses
  • Henley
  • Ford
  • Chapman
  • Copleston
Colour(s)Purple and gold
  
Song"Oba Kithu Gosa Pethirewa"
AthleticsYes
Sports
School hymn"We build our School on thee, O Lord"
Websitebishopscollege.lk

Description

Bishop's College is a private fee-levying Anglican girls' school in Sri Lanka with about 1900 students at all grades from kindergarten to Grade 14. It is located at 15 Boyd Place, Colombo 3, Sri Lanka. The current principal is Chemali G. Herath.

History

Origins, 1857-1875

Bishop's College started in 1857 as one of the earliest mission schools of the Church of England in Ceylon, and it was first known as Bishopsgate School. The Bishop of Colombo, the Rt. Rev. James Chapman (1845–1862), and his wife Frances were instrumental in setting up the school.[1] Frances Chapman had set her heart on setting up a school for Christian girls with funds collected while on furlough in England. In 1857 she established a school in their own residence in Mutwal called Bishopsgate, with the 20 pupils she desired. The principal was a Mrs Long, who had served earlier at the Church Missionary School in Nallur, Jaffna.[2] However, in May 1859, Frances Chapman returned to England due to ill health, Mrs Long died in 1861 and the school had to be temporarily closed.[3] No reference to its reopening is available in the Diocesan Archives.[4]

Reopening, 1875-1887

 
Georgiana Emily Drew (née Down, 1850-1933), with her three children Winifred Nona Radcliffe Drew, Harry Guy Radcliffe Drew, and Georgiana Daisy Radcliffe Drew. About 1882, when she was first principal of Bishopsgate School.

Bishop's College dates its beginning to 1875, when the school with 13 pupils was established at Fairfield House in Darley Road, under the same name - Bishopsgate School. Fairfield House is the present site of Link Holdings Ltd. Even today the word "Bishopsgate" stands engraved at the entrance to the building. The first principal to come out was Georgiana Down, who married Harry Drew, the son of Joseph Drew and music director at the nearby S. Thomas' College. Among the first girls enrolled were Minnie Von Possner, Hilda Obeysekera, Dorah Aserappah and Caroline Peiris. The first boys to enter the kindergarten were James and Donald Obeysekera and Leslie de Saram. Monthly expenses in running the school were about Rs. 300/- which included rent, salaries, and the hire of a piano. The income in fees in the first month totalled Rs. 302/50! In 1882 the school had twenty-one pupils, four of them in the school boarding. But the income was not sufficient to make ends meet. Even with the sale of the furniture, the debts could not be settled. Mrs. Drew resigned in April 1882, and with her departure the school had to be closed again.[5] Mrs. Drew returned to England with her husband and four children.[6]

Sisters of St. Margaret, 1887-1955

In 1887, three sisters from St Margaret's Convent in East Grinstead, England, came to Ceylon on missionary work. Their Society of Saint Margaret was a sorority founded by John Mason Neale in 1855, which had now expanded to overseas mission. After a short location at Green Path, they established their convent in Polwatte, Kollupitiya.[7]

One of them, Sister Joanna Mary, was asked to help in the running of the school. Principals and teachers who came to Ceylon to fulfil the goals of Christian mission often had to leave due to ill health, the rigours of the tropical climate or personal reasons.[8] The answer seemed to be with the Sisters of St Margaret, and Sister Angela was the first sister to be principal of Bishopsgate School. The school was to be an institution to promote educational advancement, and also a finishing school for the daughters of Christian families. Subjects taught directed them to the Cambridge local examinations: French, drawing, singing, and piano playing were also on the curriculum.[9]

In 1890, the then Bishop of Colombo, Reginald Copleston, purchased the Maradatin Cinnamon Gardens bordering on Boyd Place, Colpetty. The school moved from Darley Road to these premises in 1892 and was renamed Bishop's College. Although the Sisters of St Margaret had by now for some years been associated with the running of the school, it was now with this shift that the school was passed into their care. Proximity to St Margaret's Convent at Polwatte was of great significance. For an unbroken period of sixty years from 1895 to 1955 these sisters guided the students of Bishop's College: not only in their mental development, but in the levels of charity, community spirit and public service, and upholding of the school motto "Non Sibi Sed Omnibus" (Not for Self, but for All).

There were twelve sisters who were principals or acting principals of the school in this period of 60 years. They were, in the order of their principalship: Sister Bridget Margaret, Sister Bertha Mary, Sister Letitia, Sister Eva, Sister Mary Kathleen (acting), Sister Marguerite, Sister Ada Mary (acting), Sister Geraldine Mary, Sister Mary Kathleen, Sister Mabel, Sister Celestine and Sister Gabriel.[10]

A close bond was established between Bishop's College and St Margaret's Convent, Polwatte, which remains up to now.[11] The sisters are revered guests at all school functions; Bishop's College participates in all their special occasions and upholds the motto they gave the school by helping to the convent in fund-raising at their annual fair and in many other ways.

The number of students when the school moved to Boyd Place, was 70. As early as 1896 an association of past pupils, known then as the Bishop's College Association, was set up. As Bishop's College entered the 20th century the school chapel was dedicated to St Agnes, the Roman virgin and martyr of the 4th century.[12]

The school faced Boyd Place on the south, a property known as Arncliffe on the east, a building known as Edgecote on the west, and a government reservation adjoining the Beira Lake on the north. The property on which the school was located was held in trust by the bishop of the Diocese of Colombo with a board of three members. As the numbers on the school increased, additional staff had to be recruited and accommodation organised. The adjoining building, Edgecote, was rented out to house the kindergarten. Buildings within the premises were expanded. In due course the school built its own Kindergarten block and Edgecote was given up in 1929. Elscourt, a magnificent building on Turret Road, opposite the Victoria Park, at one time the site of the Orient Club, was gifted to the school by a loyal past pupil, Maude Peiris, mother of Harold Peiris.[13][14]

After much deliberation, and with the donor's approval, it was decided not to open a unit of the school at Elscourt as it was considered too far from the building at Boyd Place. Elscourt was sold and with funds realised. Arncliffe, the building adjoining the school with two road frontages - Boyd Place and General's Lake Road - was purchased. It was renamed Peiris House as a tribute to the generosity of Maude Peiris. With World War II entering the Asian zone, Bishop's College evacuated to "Fernhill" in Bahirawakanda, Kandy, with 37 students. Since the building could not house all the classrooms, Kandy Girls' High School generously shared their building. Those students who were left behind in Colombo were joined by those of Ladies College who had also not evacuated to form "Lake School" in the Bishop's College premises. Some of the buildings were taken over by the military, so the space was limited. In 1943, the danger from the war removed, the two branches of Bishop's College were reunited at Boyd Place. The number on the roll at the re-establishment was 100.

With the end of the war, the country was moving towards independence, and Bishop's College had in 1943 introduced Sinhala and Tamil as the media of instruction in the kindergarten, while they were being taught as a subject. Although the school had been established as a Christian missionary school, the Sisters of St Margaret had, as early as 1909, adopted a pluralist approach to religion. Of the 114 students at that time, 22 were non-Christian. In 1938 a Buddhist student was appointed head prefect.

Moving into the future: 1955-2000

In 1955 the sisters, due to non-availability of personnel, gave up guiding the school. The school thereafter had its policy determined by a board of governors with the Bishop of Colombo as chairman. L. Y. Pode was appointed principal. In 1959 Bishop's College had the first Ceylonese principal, A. C. B. (Amabel) Jayasuriya, and with her came a new identity to the school.[15] With a focus on national culture, she introduced the practice that the students of other faiths should commence their day with their own religious observance, as the Christians did, and have their own societies and celebrate their own festivals. She had a school song composed in Sinhala and set to oriental music. A Hewisi Band was trained to complement the Western Band. The activities of societies were in Sinhala, and in Tamil as the Tamil stream came up the school were on par with the English which had been a long-established tradition.

In 1959 Geoffrey Bawa and Ulrik Plesner were engaged to design a new three-storey classroom block for the school.[16] The classrooms are located on the first and second floors with an open ground level, which is used as a covered activity and play area. The design is influenced by Scandinavian modernism with its "white cubic architecture" "sharped edged prismatic forms and brise soleil facades".[17] The interior of the classroom block is protected by perforated external wall panels which are supported on a concrete portal frame and inserted between the exposed beam-ends to give an impression of extreme lightness and delicacy. A heavy horizontal eaves beam is hung out to protect the facade and to mask the pitched roof, thus accentuating the horizontality and modernist credentials of the design. When the building was nearing completion Bawa commissioned Lydia Duchini, an Italian sculptress, to create a sculpture of the bishop. The life sized gold leaf encrusted statue stands at the foot of the main staircase.

The school opted to be a free-levying private school and had to find its own financial resources. The school passed on after 19 years to the principalship of Gwen Dias Abeysinghe, a past pupil. She added to the standards inherited, and Bishop's College came to produce theatrical performances; including The Gondoliers with a combined cast of girls from Bishop's and boys from the brother school at S. Thomas' College.

The Past Pupils' Association, which has grown in strength, has always been supportive and assisted with money raising for buildings. Since the school hall, impressive in its day, was totally inadequate for present needs, the PPA was anxious to gift an auditorium to their Alma Mater, and with land leased out from the Government, laid the foundation in 1985. With the rising costs in construction, the project was spread out longer than envisaged but was commissioned for use in 1994. The school, the PPA and Parent-Teacher Association all contributed to make this a reality.

This last decade has seen the school steered by Lindley Jayasuriya, earlier vice-principal. Hemamali Bibile was the principal from 2003-2011. Sharmila Gunatilleke is the current principal.

Houses

The house system is an integral part of Bishop's College. Every student and staff member is placed into one of the four houses. Students who aren't first generation Bishopians get placed into the same house as their kindred. Each house elects a Captain, Vice Captain and Games Captain at the start of the year both in primary and secondary school. The four houses compete throughout the year in various sports and arts categories, with the main competitive event being the Annual Inter-House Athletics Meet (also known as, The Annual Sports Meet), which is held in February. House points are marked throughout the year based on discipline which are then added/deducted during the Athletics Meet. The four houses are:

House Name House Colours House Motto
Henley House Black and gold

  

Onwards and Upwards
Ford House Red and gold

  

Play up, play up, and play the game
Chapman House Blue and gold

  

Unity is Strength
Copleston House Green and gold

  

Excelsior

Henley house was placed first for the 24th consecutive year by the end of the 2019 sports meet.

Notable alumni

Name Year/degree Notability Reference
Adeline Molamure CBE, first female member of State Council of Ceylon (1931)
Iranganie Serasinghe Actress
Anoka Primrose Abeyrathne Forbes listed social entrepreneur, Asia-Pacific representative to UN-Habitat YAB

[18]

Jayanthi Kuru-Utumpala The first Sri Lankan to summit Mount Everest

[19]

Junius Richard Jayewardene Member of Parliament Kelaniya (1960), Colombo South (1960–1977), Colombo West (1977–1978), Prime Minister of Sri Lanka (1977–1978), President of Sri Lanka (1978–1989) [20][21]
Yanushi Dullewe Wijeyeratne Cardiology Specialty Registrar with PhD at the St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK & winner of the 2012 Bedi Prize. [22][23][24]

[25]

Notes

  1. ^ Bishop's College History, p.6
  2. ^ Bishop's College History, p.7
  3. ^ Bishop's College History, p.8
  4. ^ Bishop's College History, p.10
  5. ^ History of the Diocese of Colombo
  6. ^ Her four children (their births registered at Galle) were Winifred Nora Radcliffe Drew, Georgiana Daisy Radcliffe Drew, Harry Guy Radcliffe Drew and Elsa Gwendolen Radcliffe Drew. Guy Drew became the father of architect Jane Drew. A further misfortune was that her husband died in 1895, leaving her with eight children to support. She died in 1942 at the advanced age of 96.
  7. ^ Bishop's College History, p.15
  8. ^ Bishop's College History, p. 16.
  9. ^ Bishop's College History, pp. 16-17.
  10. ^ Bishop's College History, Appendix II
  11. ^ Bishop's College History, p.18
  12. ^ Bishop's College History, p.20
  13. ^ Bishop's College History, p.21
  14. ^ Mansions of Kolluptiya, Colombo in the early twentieth century Retrieved 10 December 2014
  15. ^ Through the Vistas of Life, V. S. M. De Mel, p.10 (De Mel)
  16. ^ . Geoffrey Bawa Trust. Archived from the original on 22 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  17. ^ Perara, Nihal; Tang, Wing-Shing, eds. (2013). Transforming Asian Cities. Milford Park, Oxford: Routledge. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-415-50738-7.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-04-24.
  19. ^ [1]. Daily FT, Retrieved on 20 September 2016.
  20. ^ Remembering the most dominant Lankan political figure 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ JR's 10th death anniversary today Archived 2013-07-03 at archive.today
  22. ^ . Daily News (Sri Lanka), Retrieved 3 August 2012.
  23. ^ Sri Lanka born British Doctor brings glory to Sri Lanka. Lanka News Week (Sri Lanka), Retrieved 18 August 2022.
  24. ^ Case study: Dr Yanushi Dullewe Wijeyeratne. St George's University of London, UK.
  25. ^ British Sri Lankan Cardiologist awarded prestigious NIHR Clinical Lectureship in UK. Ceylon Today (Sri Lanka), Retrieved 19 August 2022.

References

  • Bishop's College, 1975-2000, History, with an introduction by Rt. Rev. Kenneth Fernando, Bishop of Colombo, editorial committee of Bishop's College (2000) ISBN 955-8348-00-7
  • Bishop's College, Hand Book (2002).
  • History of the Diocese of Colombo (1945)

External links

  • Official website

bishop, college, colombo, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, 2016, learn, when, remove, this. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Bishop s College Colombo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bishop s College Colombo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bishop s College in Colombo Sri Lanka is a private girls school founded by the Anglican Church of Ceylon in February 1875 Bishop s College ColomboCollege CrestAddress15 Boyd PlaceColomboSri LankaCoordinates6 54 52 N 79 51 12 E 6 9144343 N 79 8533641 E 6 9144343 79 8533641 Coordinates 6 54 52 N 79 51 12 E 6 9144343 N 79 8533641 E 6 9144343 79 8533641InformationSchool typePrivate Private Day and BoardingMottoLatin Non Sibi Sed Omnibus Not for self but for all Religious affiliation s ChristianityDenominationAnglicanFoundedFebruary 1875 147 years ago 1875 02 FounderJames ChapmanSchool districtColomboChairpersonDushantha Lakshman RodrigoPrincipalChemali G HerathGrades1 14NurseryGenderFemale with males in the Nursery Enrollment1 900LanguageSinhalaTamilEnglishCampus typeUrbanHousesHenleyFordChapmanCoplestonColour s Purple and gold Song Oba Kithu Gosa Pethirewa AthleticsYesSportsWater poloSwimmingTennisTable tennisCricketDivingChessBasketballBadmintonField hockeySchool hymn We build our School on thee O Lord Websitebishopscollege wbr lk Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Origins 1857 1875 2 2 Reopening 1875 1887 2 3 Sisters of St Margaret 1887 1955 2 4 Moving into the future 1955 2000 3 Houses 4 Notable alumni 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksDescription EditBishop s College is a private fee levying Anglican girls school in Sri Lanka with about 1900 students at all grades from kindergarten to Grade 14 It is located at 15 Boyd Place Colombo 3 Sri Lanka The current principal is Chemali G Herath History EditOrigins 1857 1875 Edit Bishop s College started in 1857 as one of the earliest mission schools of the Church of England in Ceylon and it was first known as Bishopsgate School The Bishop of Colombo the Rt Rev James Chapman 1845 1862 and his wife Frances were instrumental in setting up the school 1 Frances Chapman had set her heart on setting up a school for Christian girls with funds collected while on furlough in England In 1857 she established a school in their own residence in Mutwal called Bishopsgate with the 20 pupils she desired The principal was a Mrs Long who had served earlier at the Church Missionary School in Nallur Jaffna 2 However in May 1859 Frances Chapman returned to England due to ill health Mrs Long died in 1861 and the school had to be temporarily closed 3 No reference to its reopening is available in the Diocesan Archives 4 Reopening 1875 1887 Edit Georgiana Emily Drew nee Down 1850 1933 with her three children Winifred Nona Radcliffe Drew Harry Guy Radcliffe Drew and Georgiana Daisy Radcliffe Drew About 1882 when she was first principal of Bishopsgate School Bishop s College dates its beginning to 1875 when the school with 13 pupils was established at Fairfield House in Darley Road under the same name Bishopsgate School Fairfield House is the present site of Link Holdings Ltd Even today the word Bishopsgate stands engraved at the entrance to the building The first principal to come out was Georgiana Down who married Harry Drew the son of Joseph Drew and music director at the nearby S Thomas College Among the first girls enrolled were Minnie Von Possner Hilda Obeysekera Dorah Aserappah and Caroline Peiris The first boys to enter the kindergarten were James and Donald Obeysekera and Leslie de Saram Monthly expenses in running the school were about Rs 300 which included rent salaries and the hire of a piano The income in fees in the first month totalled Rs 302 50 In 1882 the school had twenty one pupils four of them in the school boarding But the income was not sufficient to make ends meet Even with the sale of the furniture the debts could not be settled Mrs Drew resigned in April 1882 and with her departure the school had to be closed again 5 Mrs Drew returned to England with her husband and four children 6 Sisters of St Margaret 1887 1955 Edit In 1887 three sisters from St Margaret s Convent in East Grinstead England came to Ceylon on missionary work Their Society of Saint Margaret was a sorority founded by John Mason Neale in 1855 which had now expanded to overseas mission After a short location at Green Path they established their convent in Polwatte Kollupitiya 7 One of them Sister Joanna Mary was asked to help in the running of the school Principals and teachers who came to Ceylon to fulfil the goals of Christian mission often had to leave due to ill health the rigours of the tropical climate or personal reasons 8 The answer seemed to be with the Sisters of St Margaret and Sister Angela was the first sister to be principal of Bishopsgate School The school was to be an institution to promote educational advancement and also a finishing school for the daughters of Christian families Subjects taught directed them to the Cambridge local examinations French drawing singing and piano playing were also on the curriculum 9 In 1890 the then Bishop of Colombo Reginald Copleston purchased the Maradatin Cinnamon Gardens bordering on Boyd Place Colpetty The school moved from Darley Road to these premises in 1892 and was renamed Bishop s College Although the Sisters of St Margaret had by now for some years been associated with the running of the school it was now with this shift that the school was passed into their care Proximity to St Margaret s Convent at Polwatte was of great significance For an unbroken period of sixty years from 1895 to 1955 these sisters guided the students of Bishop s College not only in their mental development but in the levels of charity community spirit and public service and upholding of the school motto Non Sibi Sed Omnibus Not for Self but for All There were twelve sisters who were principals or acting principals of the school in this period of 60 years They were in the order of their principalship Sister Bridget Margaret Sister Bertha Mary Sister Letitia Sister Eva Sister Mary Kathleen acting Sister Marguerite Sister Ada Mary acting Sister Geraldine Mary Sister Mary Kathleen Sister Mabel Sister Celestine and Sister Gabriel 10 A close bond was established between Bishop s College and St Margaret s Convent Polwatte which remains up to now 11 The sisters are revered guests at all school functions Bishop s College participates in all their special occasions and upholds the motto they gave the school by helping to the convent in fund raising at their annual fair and in many other ways The number of students when the school moved to Boyd Place was 70 As early as 1896 an association of past pupils known then as the Bishop s College Association was set up As Bishop s College entered the 20th century the school chapel was dedicated to St Agnes the Roman virgin and martyr of the 4th century 12 The school faced Boyd Place on the south a property known as Arncliffe on the east a building known as Edgecote on the west and a government reservation adjoining the Beira Lake on the north The property on which the school was located was held in trust by the bishop of the Diocese of Colombo with a board of three members As the numbers on the school increased additional staff had to be recruited and accommodation organised The adjoining building Edgecote was rented out to house the kindergarten Buildings within the premises were expanded In due course the school built its own Kindergarten block and Edgecote was given up in 1929 Elscourt a magnificent building on Turret Road opposite the Victoria Park at one time the site of the Orient Club was gifted to the school by a loyal past pupil Maude Peiris mother of Harold Peiris 13 14 After much deliberation and with the donor s approval it was decided not to open a unit of the school at Elscourt as it was considered too far from the building at Boyd Place Elscourt was sold and with funds realised Arncliffe the building adjoining the school with two road frontages Boyd Place and General s Lake Road was purchased It was renamed Peiris House as a tribute to the generosity of Maude Peiris With World War II entering the Asian zone Bishop s College evacuated to Fernhill in Bahirawakanda Kandy with 37 students Since the building could not house all the classrooms Kandy Girls High School generously shared their building Those students who were left behind in Colombo were joined by those of Ladies College who had also not evacuated to form Lake School in the Bishop s College premises Some of the buildings were taken over by the military so the space was limited In 1943 the danger from the war removed the two branches of Bishop s College were reunited at Boyd Place The number on the roll at the re establishment was 100 With the end of the war the country was moving towards independence and Bishop s College had in 1943 introduced Sinhala and Tamil as the media of instruction in the kindergarten while they were being taught as a subject Although the school had been established as a Christian missionary school the Sisters of St Margaret had as early as 1909 adopted a pluralist approach to religion Of the 114 students at that time 22 were non Christian In 1938 a Buddhist student was appointed head prefect Moving into the future 1955 2000 Edit In 1955 the sisters due to non availability of personnel gave up guiding the school The school thereafter had its policy determined by a board of governors with the Bishop of Colombo as chairman L Y Pode was appointed principal In 1959 Bishop s College had the first Ceylonese principal A C B Amabel Jayasuriya and with her came a new identity to the school 15 With a focus on national culture she introduced the practice that the students of other faiths should commence their day with their own religious observance as the Christians did and have their own societies and celebrate their own festivals She had a school song composed in Sinhala and set to oriental music A Hewisi Band was trained to complement the Western Band The activities of societies were in Sinhala and in Tamil as the Tamil stream came up the school were on par with the English which had been a long established tradition In 1959 Geoffrey Bawa and Ulrik Plesner were engaged to design a new three storey classroom block for the school 16 The classrooms are located on the first and second floors with an open ground level which is used as a covered activity and play area The design is influenced by Scandinavian modernism with its white cubic architecture sharped edged prismatic forms and brise soleil facades 17 The interior of the classroom block is protected by perforated external wall panels which are supported on a concrete portal frame and inserted between the exposed beam ends to give an impression of extreme lightness and delicacy A heavy horizontal eaves beam is hung out to protect the facade and to mask the pitched roof thus accentuating the horizontality and modernist credentials of the design When the building was nearing completion Bawa commissioned Lydia Duchini an Italian sculptress to create a sculpture of the bishop The life sized gold leaf encrusted statue stands at the foot of the main staircase The school opted to be a free levying private school and had to find its own financial resources The school passed on after 19 years to the principalship of Gwen Dias Abeysinghe a past pupil She added to the standards inherited and Bishop s College came to produce theatrical performances including The Gondoliers with a combined cast of girls from Bishop s and boys from the brother school at S Thomas College The Past Pupils Association which has grown in strength has always been supportive and assisted with money raising for buildings Since the school hall impressive in its day was totally inadequate for present needs the PPA was anxious to gift an auditorium to their Alma Mater and with land leased out from the Government laid the foundation in 1985 With the rising costs in construction the project was spread out longer than envisaged but was commissioned for use in 1994 The school the PPA and Parent Teacher Association all contributed to make this a reality This last decade has seen the school steered by Lindley Jayasuriya earlier vice principal Hemamali Bibile was the principal from 2003 2011 Sharmila Gunatilleke is the current principal Houses EditThe house system is an integral part of Bishop s College Every student and staff member is placed into one of the four houses Students who aren t first generation Bishopians get placed into the same house as their kindred Each house elects a Captain Vice Captain and Games Captain at the start of the year both in primary and secondary school The four houses compete throughout the year in various sports and arts categories with the main competitive event being the Annual Inter House Athletics Meet also known as The Annual Sports Meet which is held in February House points are marked throughout the year based on discipline which are then added deducted during the Athletics Meet The four houses are House Name House Colours House MottoHenley House Black and gold Onwards and UpwardsFord House Red and gold Play up play up and play the gameChapman House Blue and gold Unity is StrengthCopleston House Green and gold ExcelsiorHenley house was placed first for the 24th consecutive year by the end of the 2019 sports meet Notable alumni EditSee also Category Alumni of Bishop s College This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Name Year degree Notability ReferenceAdeline Molamure CBE first female member of State Council of Ceylon 1931 Iranganie Serasinghe ActressAnoka Primrose Abeyrathne Forbes listed social entrepreneur Asia Pacific representative to UN Habitat YAB 18 Jayanthi Kuru Utumpala The first Sri Lankan to summit Mount Everest 19 Junius Richard Jayewardene Member of Parliament Kelaniya 1960 Colombo South 1960 1977 Colombo West 1977 1978 Prime Minister of Sri Lanka 1977 1978 President of Sri Lanka 1978 1989 20 21 Yanushi Dullewe Wijeyeratne Cardiology Specialty Registrar with PhD at the St George s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London UK amp winner of the 2012 Bedi Prize 22 23 24 25 Notes Edit Bishop s College History p 6 Bishop s College History p 7 Bishop s College History p 8 Bishop s College History p 10 History of the Diocese of Colombo Her four children their births registered at Galle were Winifred Nora Radcliffe Drew Georgiana Daisy Radcliffe Drew Harry Guy Radcliffe Drew and Elsa Gwendolen Radcliffe Drew Guy Drew became the father of architect Jane Drew A further misfortune was that her husband died in 1895 leaving her with eight children to support She died in 1942 at the advanced age of 96 Bishop s College History p 15 Bishop s College History p 16 Bishop s College History pp 16 17 Bishop s College History Appendix II Bishop s College History p 18 Bishop s College History p 20 Bishop s College History p 21 Mansions of Kolluptiya Colombo in the early twentieth century Retrieved 10 December 2014 Through the Vistas of Life V S M De Mel p 10 De Mel Beginnings Tropical Modernism Geoffrey Bawa Trust Archived from the original on 22 August 2016 Retrieved 5 September 2016 Perara Nihal Tang Wing Shing eds 2013 Transforming Asian Cities Milford Park Oxford Routledge p 82 ISBN 978 0 415 50738 7 Anoka s Mangrove campaign Ceylontoday lk Archived from the original on 2017 04 24 1 Daily FT Retrieved on 20 September 2016 Remembering the most dominant Lankan political figure Archived 2007 09 30 at the Wayback Machine JR s 10th death anniversary today Archived 2013 07 03 at archive today Bedi Prize 2012 to Sri Lankan doctor Daily News Sri Lanka Retrieved 3 August 2012 Sri Lanka born British Doctor brings glory to Sri Lanka Lanka News Week Sri Lanka Retrieved 18 August 2022 Case study Dr Yanushi Dullewe Wijeyeratne St George s University of London UK British Sri Lankan Cardiologist awarded prestigious NIHR Clinical Lectureship in UK Ceylon Today Sri Lanka Retrieved 19 August 2022 References EditBishop s College 1975 2000 History with an introduction by Rt Rev Kenneth Fernando Bishop of Colombo editorial committee of Bishop s College 2000 ISBN 955 8348 00 7 Bishop s College Hand Book 2002 History of the Diocese of Colombo 1945 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bishop 27s College Colombo amp oldid 1112634369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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