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Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney

The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney (PLC Sydney) is an independent Presbyterian single-sex early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school for girls, located in Croydon, an inner-western suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The school has a non-selective enrolment policy for all years except Year 11,[6] and caters for approximately 1,250 girls from age four (Branxton Reception) to age eighteen (Year 12), including 65 boarders. Students attend PLC from all regions of the greater metropolitan area, New South Wales, and overseas.[7]

Presbyterian Ladies’ College, Sydney
Shubra Hall at Croydon, PLC main school, built 1890
Location

Australia
Coordinates33°52′54″S 151°6′57″E / 33.88167°S 151.11583°E / -33.88167; 151.11583
Information
TypeIndependent single-sex early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school
MottoLatin: Sancte Sapienter
(Be holy wisely)
DenominationPresbyterianism
Established1888; 136 years ago (1888)[1]
Educational authorityNew South Wales Department of Education
OversightPresbyterian Church of Australia
ChairmanDavid Lim
PrincipalDr Paul Burgis
ChaplainCassandra Morphew
Employees~131[4]
YearsEarly learning and K–12
GenderGirls
Enrolmentc. 1,250[3] (2007)
Colour(s)Black, red and white    
SloganYoung Women of Integrity and Purpose[2]
Affiliations
Websitewww.plc.nsw.edu.au
[5]

Established in 1888 by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of NSW, PLC is the oldest continuously running Presbyterian Church school in its state.[8][9] The college is a founding member of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls' Schools and is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia, the Junior School Heads Association of Australia, and the Australian Boarding Schools' Association.[10][11][12][13] PLC is one of two Sydney schools in the Round Square organisation.[14]

Notable alumnae include the first qualified female architect in Australia and other pioneering women in education, law, and medicine.

History edit

Foundation edit

In 1883 the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of NSW formed a special committee to investigate a proposal to establish boarding schools for girls and for boys, to provide Presbyterian alternatives to the proliferating number of Roman Catholic secondary schools in the colony.[15] The Minister at Richmond, Rev James Cameron stated: "Presbyterians should take prompt action because the Popish party, seeing the want that was felt throughout the colony in regard to higher education, has stepped in to supply that want, and if Protestants did not look to the matter, the Roman Catholics would take advantage of them."[15] The General Assembly was also inspired to establish a school, particularly a Ladies' College, by less worthy motives. Other Protestant denominations in NSW had recently established their own Ladies' Colleges, and the neighbouring colony of Victoria had maintained a Presbyterian Ladies' College since 1875, and so it was felt that NSW Presbyterians should also have one.[15] At the 1884 Assembly the Committee announced that while a boys' school was not needed, the secondary education options available to girls were not satisfactory, and they recommended that a Ladies' College, similar to the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne, be established as soon as possible.[15]

A Ladies' College Committee was formed and by July 1887 they had leased a property in Ashfield. For principal, they unanimously selected Dr. John Marden, a science master from the Methodist Ladies' College (MLC) in Melbourne, "because of his high academic standing, his experience and success in teaching and his high Christian character".[16] Marden was a strong believer in equal opportunity in education, and has been described as an "early feminist".[17] He rejected the idea that PLC was to be merely a finishing school for the daughters of the wealthy,[18] and was once quoted as saying:

I am ... out of sympathy with the cry that education is unnecessary for girls, and that all they require is a few accomplishments. Women have also to live their life - in most cases a harder one than men have. This notion of accomplishments being sufficient for girls is surely a remnant of those barbarous days when women were looked on as the plaything of men.[18]

The Presbyterian Ladies' College was finally opened by Marden and lady superintendent, M. McCormick,[19] on 30 January 1888, with 39 girls. It was modelled on the great English Public Schools,[20] and was the first school to be established by the Presbyterian Church of New South Wales.[8] Together with the Committee, Marden was responsible for organising the curriculum and hiring the appropriate staff.[21] During the opening ceremony the Governor invited his wife, the Countess of Jersey, Margaret Child-Villiers, to speak. She made what the Sydney Morning Herald described as a "capital impromptu speech".[20] The Countess' speech was widely reported throughout Australia and elsewhere around the world, as at the time it was quite unusual for a woman to speak in public.[20] PLC's Jersey Day, an annual event in which ex-students return to the College on the Sunday closest to 10 March, is named in honour of the Countess.[22]

Growth edit

In the early years at Croydon, girls tended to be enrolled at an older age, typically over fourteen. It was apparent that despite Marden's insistence, many parents viewed the college as a finishing school. As today, it was not a requirement for students to be Presbyterians, and early school records indicate there were a number of Roman Catholic and Jewish students. By 1900, the reputation of the school had spread, and pupils were starting to come from a wider geographic area, including New Caledonia, Fiji, New Zealand, the Northern Territory, Western Australia, Queensland and South Australia.[23]

The increase in enrolments also convinced the Council of the need to set up a branch school on another site, preferably on the North Shore. In 1913, Marden reported that many applications were being refused because of "shortness of space."[20] The Assembly approved the establishment of a branch at Pymble and gave the Council of PLC Croydon £5,000 to erect new buildings and lay out the grounds. The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Pymble was opened on 8 February 1916 with 48 day girls and 86 boarders. Marden became the principal of both schools. The opening of the Pymble campus necessitated a change of name for the Croydon College, from The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney to The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Croydon.[20]

Marden retired at the end of 1919 and a principal was appointed to each branch. Dr E. Neil McQueen, a prominent educational innovator who had previously been the Vice-Principal of the two schools, became the second Principal of PLC Croydon.[20]

In 1918, the school magazine Aurora Australis was first published. On the cover, it bore a quotation from Thomas Carlyle: '. . . here hath been dawning another blue day. Think wilt thou let it slip useless away.'[24]

Second World War edit

In 1941, both the Principal Mary Hamilton, and the Senior Mistress (novelist, critic and historian) Flora Eldershaw, left the school to fill wartime positions in the bureaucracy. In 1942, the new principal, Dr Helen Wilkie, arrived to find falling enrolments, staffing problems and food shortages due to the effects of the Second World War. Word was soon received that Australian military authorities wished to inspect the school with a view to taking it over. On 24 March 1942, it was requested that PLC be occupied by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) for the purpose of establishing a top secret Radar Unit and military barracks known as No.1 RIMU (Radio Installation and Maintenance Unit).[25][26] In order to accommodate PLC's students and classes, the Council approached Meriden School in Strathfield. Meriden agreed to house the boarders and the singing, domestic science, and physical education classes. PLC also purchased Lingwood, a property in Strathfield, as a centre for the school's remaining activities.[25]

At the end of 1942, the Meriden authorities indicated that they could no longer house the PLC boarders, so Lauriston, Strathfield, on The Boulevarde, and Welbeck, at 18 Margaret Street, were rented for them. In July 1944 the Council agreed to purchase Lingwood, at 16 Margaret Street, to house a Kindergarten feeder school for the college, or as a site for a permanent move. A few months later the Council decided that the future of PLC lay in Strathfield. The Croydon campus was offered to the military for £36,500 and plans were made to purchase Welbeck and Lauriston to form the new PLC.

The Council's preference for Strathfield as a permanent location for the school was not shared by most of the school community,[25] and after an intervention by the Education Trust of the NSW General Assembly it was decided that PLC would reopen once again at Croydon in first term 1946. The military agreed to pay for the extensive renovations that were required, with the final cheque handed over by the government on 21 March 1949. Lauriston and Welbeck were disposed of in 1946, but the Lingwood property was retained as a preparatory school. The Council negotiated with Margaret Thompson, the owner and principal of Branxton, a private school in Strathfield, about moving her school to the Lingwood property, where it would retain the name Branxton and come under the control of the PLC Council.[b][25]

Evidence of PLC's wartime occupation remain, with tunnels and bomb shelters accessible from below the stage of College Hall. A plaque presented to the school by the RAAF, in commemoration of PLC's wartime involvement, can be found on the school verandah at the entrance to the Main School.[25]

Earlier Still:

Freda Whitlam (born 1920), sister of Prime Minister Gough Whitlam was principal between 1958 and 1976. It was a period of great social transition. In 1968 Miss Whitlam wrote: 'Ours is a world where each year we become more conscious of how quickly and radically our environment is changing. Technology is taking the drudgery out of our lives and opening up exciting opportunities for those who have a good general education and are willing to think positively and creatively. Here we help the girls with this aim in view.'[27] In 1970, after Bill McLeod spoke to some of the seniors and advised those intending to become a nurse or a teacher to learn Greek or Italian (to aid communication with immigrants), Miss Whitlam took up the suggestion: 'We have people with time to do something after the exams at the end of each year – let's organise Greek classes for them'.[28] In March 1972 the school also produced a newsletter ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΝΕΑ providing background on Greek culture and language and a bibliography of relevant books in the school library.

In 1977, a Union of the Congregational, Methodist and Presbyterian Churches took place, forming the Uniting Church in Australia. Approximately one third of the Presbyterian Church decided to remain Presbyterian, and consequently the property of the Church had to be divided. In May of that year it was announced that PLC Croydon was to remain Presbyterian and PLC Pymble would be transferred, with its name changed to Pymble Ladies' College. Then in 1978 it was decided that PLC Croydon should return to its original name: The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney.[29] Freda Whitlam took part in the movement to form the Uniting Church and thus ended her principalship of the school. She was moderator of the New South Wales Synod of the Uniting Church in Australia (1985–1986).[30]

In late August 2005, due to financial troubles at the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Armidale, it was announced that PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney would join to form an alliance, with both schools coming under the executive leadership of Dr William McKeith, the Principal of PLC Sydney. Members of the PLC Armidale Council formed part of the new joint school Council, essentially making the two PLC's true sister schools.[31]

The aim of this alliance is to strengthen PLC Armidale through cooperative marketing, a change in management, and a stronger financial base. It is also meant to benefit both schools by providing student exchanges, accommodations for sporting events or excursions, and an additional "country or city" option to prospective students. Both schools will maintain their separate identities in order to preserve the unique histories and traditions that both have developed over many years.[31] PLC celebrated their 120th anniversary in 2008 and to mark the occasion the college commissioned a limited edition commemorative coffee table book, PLC Sydney 1888–2008: A Photographic Essay.[32]

Principals edit

The following individuals have served as Principal of PLC Sydney:

Ordinal Headmaster Qualifications Other key positions held Term start Term end Time in office Notes
1 Dr John Marden BA, LLD (Melbourne) Principal of both Croydon and Pymble Colleges from 1916 1887 1919 31–32 years [21]
2 Dr Ewen Neil McQueen MA (Melbourne), DSc (London) Vice-Principal of both Colleges until 1920 1920 1929 8–9 years
3 Anna Drennan MA (Edinburgh) Acting Principal at Pymble 1928 1929 1931 1–2 years Acting Principal
4 Mary Hamilton BA, DipEd (Melbourne) 1933 1941 7–8 years
5 Dr Helen Isabella Wilkie MA, PhD (Edinburgh) Principal of PLC Armidale 1938–1941 1942 1945 2–3 years
6 Eunice Macindoe BSc (Sydney) 1946 1956 9–10 years Alumnae of PLC Sydney (Class of 1921)
7 Jean Tassie BA 1957 1957 0 years Acting Principal
8 Freda L. Whitlam BA, Dip Ed (Melbourne) MA (Yale) 1958 1976 17–18 years
9 Norma Brown BA, DipEd 1977 1977 0 years Acting Principal
10 Patricia Dyson MA, DipEd (Sydney) 1978 1985 6–7 years
11 Dr William T. McKeith AM BA, Dip Ed (Macquarie), MA (Sydney),
MBA (Leicester), EdD (Leicester), FACE, FAIM
Principal of both PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney from 2005 1986 2010 23–24 years [33]
12 Dr Paul Burgis PhD (UNSW), MEd, DipTchg, DipDiv Executive Principal of both PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney 2011 incumbent 12–13 years

Campus edit

The Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney, initially opened on 30 January 1888, at Fernlea, a 14-room gentleman's residence set on 1.21 hectares (3 acres) in Ashfield.[15] But by August they had already outgrown this location, so they purchased Shubra Hall, the home of department store owner Anthony Hordern III at Croydon, for £7,500. Plans were drawn up for the additional buildings required, and Marden worked closely with the architect, Albert Bond. Marden was responsible for most of the ideas for the new buildings, based on those he had seen at MLC Melbourne.[20] Keenly interested in horticulture, he also laid out gardens and playing fields.[19] By the beginning of the 1891 school year, the new site was complete and ready for furnishing as the permanent home of PLC.

The Presbyterian reported the opening of the College on 10 March 1891, by the Governor of NSW, the Rt Hon Victor Albert George, 7th Earl of Jersey at its new site:

Standing in 2.43 hectares (6 acres) of ground, laid out in lawn tennis courts, gardens, etc., in an elevated position, it forms, with its tower 84 ft (26 m) [26 m] high, a very conspicuous feature in the landscape. The central feature of the building is the tower, and the architectural design of the facade is classic. Altogether the effect is very imposing ... The main staircase window is a work of art well worth seeing. The central window is beautifully designed, and contains two female figures representing Literature and Music.[20]

By 1902 PLC was running out of space again and Marden urged that new classrooms be built. The Council reluctantly agreed and an extension was made to the Main School, with six classrooms downstairs and 18 rooms upstairs. The addition was completed on 6 October 1904, at a cost of £2,000.[20]

On 24 March 1942, it was requested that PLC be occupied by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) for the purpose of establishing a top secret Radar Unit and military barracks known as No.1 RIMU (Radio Installation and Maintenance Unit).[25][26] PLC's displaced boarders, and some of the classrooms, found a temporary home at Meriden School in Strathfield. The school purchased Lingwood, also in Strathfield, as a centre for the school's remaining activities.[25]

At the end of 1942, the Meriden authorities indicated that they could no longer house the PLC boarders, so Lauriston (now the primary school of Santa Sabina College) and Welbeck, on The Boulevarde at Strathfield, were rented for them. The PLC Council nearly kept the school at Strathfield permanently, but ultimately it was decided that PLC would reopen once again at Croydon in first term 1946. The military agreed to pay for the extensive renovations that were required, Lauriston and Welbeck were disposed of in 1946, and the Lingwood property was retained as a preparatory school.[25] Evidence of PLC's wartime occupation remain, with tunnels and bomb shelters accessible from below the stage of College Hall. A plaque presented to the school by the RAAF, in commemoration of PLC's wartime involvement, can be found on the school verandah at the entrance to the Main School.[25]

And so the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney, still sits on a 5 hectares (12 acres) campus, now adjacent to Croydon Railway Station and within 15 minutes of the Sydney central business district, Sydney University, and the University of Technology.[7] Having grown significantly since its foundation, particularly since the 1980s, the school today features a mix of 19th-century and modern buildings, historic landscaped gardens and playing fields.[4]


Curriculum edit

The Presbyterian Ladies' College is a comprehensive school with a traditional academic approach designed to prepare students for attending a university.[34] The school is registered and accredited with the New South Wales Education Standards Authority,[35] and therefore follows the mandated curriculum for all years.

Primary edit

Students in stages 1 to 3 (Kindergarten to Year 6) study the six Key Learning Areas: English, Mathematics, History/Geography, Science and Technology, Creative Arts, Personal Development, Health and Physical Education (PD/H/PE). The youngest students also follow the Reggio Emilia approach to education. Specialist extension courses are offered to select students from Year 2 to 6 with gifts and talents in special areas (SPEC).[34]

Secondary edit

Subjects offered to stage 4 students (Years 7 and 8) include: English, Mathematics, Science, Geography, History, French, Mandarin, Latin, Japanese, German, Italian, Design and Technology, Visual Arts, Music, PDHPE, Computing and Religious Education. The "Excelsior class" is an enrichment programme offered to gifted students in this stage and includes additional classes such as Philosophy and Olympiad activities.[34]

In stage 5 (Years 9 and 10), students are prepared for the School Certificate and study a programme that comprises two elective classes and Religious Education, as well as the courses mandated by the Board of Studies. The compulsory core subjects are: English, Mathematics, Science, Australian History and Geography, and PDHPE. Electives are chosen from: Elective History, Elective Geography, French, German, Mandarin, Latin, Japanese, Italian, Commerce, Drama, Design and Technology, Textiles and Design, Music, Visual Arts, and Physical Activity and Sports Science. In Year 10, the Excelsior class begins its study of the 1–Unit Higher School Certificate (HSC) course in Studies of Religion.[34]

In the final school stage (Years 11 and 12) students are prepared for the New South Wales HSC. The curriculum at this stage has a clear university orientation. The Board of Studies requires stage 6 students to study a minimum of 12 units in the Preliminary Year and 10 units in their HSC Year (most subjects being worth 2 units). HSC English is compulsory; Standard and Advanced Extension courses, as well as 2-unit English as a Second Language are also offered. Students may then choose from all levels of Mathematics, Senior Science, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Modern History, Ancient History, Business Studies, Economics, Geography, Legal studies, French, German, Latin, Japanese, Italian, Indonesian (Beginners), Mandarin, Design and Technology, Textiles and Design, Food Technology, Visual Arts, Music (Course 1 and 2), Drama and PDHPE.[34]

University entry levels are high following the completion of stage 6. Each year approximately 50% of graduating PLC students receive a Universities Admission Index (UAI) higher than 90.[36] In the 2006 Higher School Certificate, a PLC student received a perfect UAI score of 100,[37] and in 2007 The Daily Telegraph named PLC the best-performing independent school in Sydney's inner–west.[38]

Special education edit

PLC also offers a unique special education unit catering to students with mild to moderate intellectual disabilities. The transition programme was developed in 1992 in response to a decision by academic staff to provide a special-needs stream. Through this unit, up to 20 girls between the ages of 11 and 18 are provided with an individual curriculum incorporating mainstream classes where possible.[39]

Senior students focus on the NESA Life Skills programme. Girls spend time as residential students in the on-campus Transition House, learning to manage their lives independently. Transition students also run an outdoor café to gain small business skills.[39]

Co-curriculum edit

Sport edit

PLC Sydney is arguably one of Australia's best girls' sporting schools.[40] The college has been a member of the Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association (IGSSA) since its foundation in 1922,[41] and through this association senior students compete against 27 other girls' schools in graded weekend sports and carnivals. Sports available to students through IGSSA include swimming, diving, rowing, cross country, athletics, gymnastics, softball, tennis, basketball, soccer, Field hockey, netball, cricket and water polo.[42] The college also offers sports such as skiing, snowboarding, equestrian and badminton through other competitions.[41] In 2007 PLC won three IGSSA carnival premierships: in diving (for the ninth consecutive year), swimming,[43] and gymnastics.[44]

Primary school girls have the opportunity to participate in interschool sports through PLC's membership in the New South Wales branch of the Junior School Heads Association of Australia (JSHAA).[41] Students with special sporting talent are provided a pathway to compete at the highest level available at PLC, IGSSA/JSHAA, Combined Independent Schools, state representation at School Sport Australia, and Commonwealth and Olympic level.[45]

In September 2007, the college broke the under-19 female Australian record for 24-hour non-stop rowing, with a distance of 337 kilometres (209 mi).[46] Also in 2007, PLC was named the New South Wales School Snowsports Club of the Year by the NSW Snowsports Association,[47] later winning the national award at the 2007 Ski and Snowboard Australia Awards.[48]

The 2008 rowing season has been one of the school's best to date. In March, the PLC 1st Eight crew won the Schoolgirl Eight race at the IGSSA regatta for the first time in the school's history.[49] This crew was also successful at the 2008 Australian Rowing Championships, winning the A Final of the Schoolgirls Eight race (the Sydney Cup), ahead of St Catherine's School, Toorak and Pymble Ladies' College, thus ranking them as the best schoolgirl eight in Australia.[50][51]

Ensembles edit

Junior and Senior School students can participate in musical ensembles, both selective and non-selective, including several bands, string orchestras, a full school orchestra, chamber music ensembles, choral groups and several smaller instrumental and vocal groups.[52]

Debating and public speaking edit

One of the strengths of PLC Sydney is their long history of achievement in debating and public speaking. The college has competed in the Independent Schools Debating Association (ISDA) for the past five years[53] and has had a long-standing commitment to the Archdale Debating Competition. PLC students have had success at the semi-final level,[54] and they won the competition in 2006 and 2017.[55]

PLC Sydney enters teams in the Junior and Senior sections of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls' Schools (AHIGS) Festival of Speech, producing the best results of any AHIGS school over the history of the competition, with 10 consecutive wins in the competition's 12-year history.

Students may also participate in the Macquarie Cup and the Commonwealth Bank Senior Debating, vying with students from a range of public, Catholic and independent schools. There are also Social Debates with surrounding schools as well as a regular competition with Trinity Grammar School called the PLC/Trinity Challenge.[54]

Aid projects edit

The PLC Overseas Aid Fund has been established to enhance the college's work with aid projects in developing countries, and is an important part of the school's Round Square membership.[56] Current projects undertaken by the school include the establishment and on-going management of two Kindergartens in East Timor,[57] the management and support of Birla Children's Orphanage in Vietnam, and the establishment of the "Adopt a School" programme. This programme was developed and is directed by the principal, Dr McKeith, and matches schools in Australia with schools in Sri Lanka requiring rebuilding following the 2004 Tsunami. PLC's school, allocated through this programme, is the Senehasa Counselling, Training and Rehabilitation Centre for Girls.[58]

Motto and crest edit

 
Collectable Cigarette card featuring the PLC colours and crest, 'c. 1910s

The school crest was adopted at a College Council meeting on 23 August 1888. The College Council decided to use the same crest as that used by the Presbyterian Church of New South Wales, with minor modifications.[59]

The Church's crest consisted of a shield with the words Nec Tamen Consumebatur (translated from Latin as "And yet it was not consumed") surrounding it.[60] On the shield were the stars of the Southern Cross, a burning bush, and a Latin cross in outline. At the base were the floral emblems of Scotland, England and Ireland. Surrounding the shield was a border with the words "Presbyterian Church of New South Wales", with a Star of David placed on top. Behind both shield and borders was the cross of St. Andrew in blue.[59]

The school modified this crest by changing the words "Presbyterian Church of New South Wales" to "Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney", placing a Maltese cross at the top of the shield and inserting the School motto Sancte Sapienter. The motto had been adopted by the school on 23 August 1888, and although no translation was given of the Latin, it may be loosely translated to "be holy wisely" or "holy, wisely."[59]

School badge edit

 
PLC Sydney school badge

The school's highly symbolic badge was inspired by the first principal, Dr. Marden, and designed in 1888 by the first art teacher, J.A. Bennett. The maiden on the lion represents Knowledge, which is crowned by a tower representing the home, and holding a trident representing Sovereignty. A laurel wreath represents the victory of true womanhood, while the sun symbolises light and energy, and the crescent moon stands for youth. The words "Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney" surround the badge.[61]

The motto All'ultimo lavoro is Italian and comes from Dante's Commedia (Paradiso I, 13). It has variously been translated as "for the crowning task", "strive for the highest", "the utmost for the highest", or "I work for the highest",[61] with the first of these being the most direct translation.

The badge is reproduced in the leadlight over the front door of Shubra Hall,[61] and may also be found on the recently opened Ex-Students' pathway. It was traditionally worn as part of the uniform on the Tam o' Shanter, until it was phased out in 1995. The badge is currently not worn on the academic uniform, partially due to its adoption by Pymble Ladies' College as their school crest in 1977.[61] It was, however, reintroduced in 2003 as an addition to the Beret of the PLC Pipes and Drums uniform, and is also used by the college's Ex-students' Union, as it has been since 1905, with the addition of the words "Ex-students' Union" below.[61]

Uniform edit

When the college first opened in 1888 there was no uniform, instead the girls wore long cotton dresses, gloves and hat. A straw boater was introduced in the early 20th century, worn with a red and white hat band featuring the college crest with its burning bush woven into it in red. During this time Prefects wore red silk arm-bands embroidered with a gold crest.[62]

The distinctive Black Watch Tartan of the college was introduced in 1908. Senior girls wore heavy box-pleated skirts and white blouses; junior girls wore pinafore dresses. All girls wore a navy blazer and heavy woollen stockings. Prefects also wore a special hat badge with a ring of bright blue enamel. A black felt Breton was introduced for winter use, and no change was made until the introduction of the green beret in 1952.[62]

The current uniform for Year 11 and 12 was introduced in 1966. It was designed by the senior students of 1965 and consists of a Black Watch kilt, white blouse, green blazer, green jumper or vest, black stockings for winter and bottle green knee-high socks for summer, and black leather lace-up shoes. Girls of Scottish origin are permitted wear the kilt pin representing their family or clan name, rather than the standard school pin. A green and Black Watch Tam o' Shanter (known as 'the Beret') was also introduced for all grades a few years earlier.[62]

The girls found the school's distinctive Beret difficult to wear, so it was phased out in 1995.[63] It was replaced by the current Panama hat, but the Beret was reintroduced in 2003 as an addition to the Pipes and Drums uniform.

The current junior (R–10) uniform was introduced in 1997. In summer, girls are required to wear a Black Watch tunic, short-sleeve white blouse, green blazer with tartan piping, short green socks and black leather shoes. The winter uniform consists of the tunic, long-sleeve white blouse, the blazer, green jumper or vest, Black Watch Tartan tie, Black Watch Tartan scarf and either green knee-high socks or black stockings.[64] School pockets are awarded for student achievements, and are embroidered in red on the pockets of junior blazers (R–10 girls), and white on the left-breast of senior blazers (11–12 girls).


College tartan edit

The school has adopted the Black Watch Tartan of the Royal Highland Regiment as its school and Pipes and Drums uniform. PLC was granted permission to wear the tartan after its brother school, The Scots College, was issued a royal decree allowing them to use Black Watch as their Pipes & Drums and Cadets uniform. The Black Watch is the oldest of the highland regiments. The 1958 Aurora Australis (the school yearbook) explained the tartan's origin: "This tartan was specially designed for the regiment to prevent the jealousy which would have been aroused, if any existing clan tartan had been used."[65]

House system edit

The house system was established by Dr. John Marden, shortly after the opening of the school, with three houses: East, West and Boarders. In 1924 the senior houses were reorganised and renamed Kinross, Harper and Ferguson (with Anderson added in 1968), followed in 1926 by the introduction of junior houses, named Vicars and McQueen (with Thompson added in 1937).[66] The school moved to four houses in 1979, from primary to secondary, and thus the junior houses disappeared.[66] Finally, two new houses named Pickard and Wilkie were introduced in 1995. The Houses are named after women and men who have made a significant contribution to the life of the college.[67]

Anderson

Mrs E.O. Anderson (1885–1985) attended PLC from 1898 to 1902. She was an original member of the Committee of the Ex-Students' Union in 1906, then President (1927–1932), and Patroness from 1936. In 1932 she petitioned the Assembly for the appointment of women to the PLC Council. Anderson was a member of the Council (1932–1958), and a benefactor to the college all her life.[67]

Ferguson

Rev John Ferguson (1852–1925) was a minister of St Stephen's Church, Sydney, and in 1917, Acting Principal of St Andrew's College at the University of Sydney. He was appointed Senior Chaplain and Chairman of the PLC Council in 1913, serving until 1923.[67]

Harper

Rev Dr Andrew Harper (1844–1936) was the third Principal of PLC Melbourne (1879–1888). He then lectured at Ormond Theological College, Melbourne before coming to Sydney, where he was Principal of St Andrew's College (1902–1923). He was Chairman of the PLC Council from 1907 until 1913.[67]

Kinross

Rev Dr John Kinross (1833–1908) was a Presbyterian minister at Kiama (1858–1875). He then became Principal of St Andrew's College from 1875 until 1901, and Chairman of the PLC Council from 1888 until 1906.[67][68]

Pickard

Marion Pickard was appointed to the college as a teaching governess in June 1888. She was Lady Superintendent from 1894 until her resignation in 1907. In 1905 Pickard was elected the first President of the Ex-Students' Union.[67]

Wilkie

Dr Helen Wilkie (1895–1984) was the second Headmistress at PLC Armidale (1938–1941), and then the fourth Principal of PLC Sydney (1942–1946). On her appointment to Croydon she was immediately confronted with the takeover by the RAAF, and organised the move of the College to Strathfield.[67]

Ex-Students' Union edit

The Ex-Students' Union is the school's alumnae association, inaugurated on the evening of 9 December 1905. At the invitation of Dr. Marden several former students discussed the proposal, elected Marion Pickard (who was at that time Lady Superintendent) as their President, and formed a committee to produce a constitution. These actions were confirmed at a General Meeting on Jersey Day 1906, and the committee took office until 1907. In the beginning, the main objectives of the Union were "the accumulation of a special fund to be devoted to the erection of a chapel and library at the College, and an Ex-Students' prize to be awarded annually to the girl most proficient in work and sport."[d][69]

The Union achieved much in its first few years: renting a building in the CBD to serve as a club and committee meeting place, making garments for hospitals, visiting kindergartens, the YWCA, Home of Peace, Infants' Home and the Royal Institute for Deaf and Blind Children. An Ex-Students' Orchestra and Dramatic Club were formed, and tennis and croquet matches were held between current and former pupils.[69]

 
Florence Taylor, Class of 1896

In 1916 the Pymble College was opened and its first Ex-Students' Union expressed an interest in joining that of PLC. Subsequently, a combined Union was formed, known as the PLC Croydon and Pymble Ex-Students' Union, and an Ex-Students' prize was established at Pymble on the same conditions as at Croydon.[69]

One of the Union's most significant contributions to the school was planned following the death of Dr. Marden in 1924. With the desire to provide Marden with a "fitting and lasting memorial",[69] it was decided that a library, to be called the John Marden Memorial Library, should be built at the Croydon College. This building was opened by Mrs. Marden in 1927 and although no longer suitable as a library due its size, it remains a treasured part of the school.[69]

In 1929, it was proposed that "Pymble students should form a separate Union"[69] and that an equitable division of Union funds should be undertaken. This explains the two separate groups that exist today, however, it is still not uncommon for Pymble students to attend Croydon reunions and events, particularly regional or interstate activities.[69]

Notable alumnae edit

Alumnae of the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney are commonly referred to as PLC Old Girls, and may elect to join the schools alumnae association, the PLC Ex-Students' Union.[69]

Notable among these women are Sibyl Morrison, the first female barrister in New South Wales,[70] Marie Byles, the first practicing female solicitor in New South Wales,[71] Jessie Aspinall, the first female junior resident medical officer at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital,[72] Florence Mary Taylor, the first qualified female architect and first woman to train as an engineer in Australia, and the first woman in Australia to fly in a heavier-than-air craft,[73] and Annabelle Williams, Commonwealth Games Medallist and current world-record holder of the EAD 100m freestyle (S9 classification).

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  • ^ Branxton served as a co-educational prep school for the college until 1996, when it was sold to Meriden School and its name reverted to "Lingwood".
  • ^ The proposal to build a Chapel was abandoned in 1907, and subsequently no Chapel has ever been erected at PLC.

References edit

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  70. ^ O'Brien, Joan M (1986). "Morrison, Sibyl Enid (1895–1961)". Morrison, Sibyl Enid Vera Munro (1895–1961). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 10 (Online ed.). Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. p. 596. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
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  73. ^ Heywood, Anne (4 July 2002). "Taylor, Florence Mary (1879–1969)". Australian Women Biographical Entry. National Foundation for Australian Women. Retrieved 1 August 2007.

Further reading edit

  • Butt, M.F. 1978. Presbyterian Ladies' College, Orange – A Journal. Orange, G.H Craig.
  • Coleman, M. 1991. This is Pymble College: The First 75 years, 1916–1991. Pymble Ladies' College.
  • Diamond Jubilee Year Book. PLC Croydon, 1948.
  • Fitzpatrick, K. 1975. PLC Melbourne: The First Century 1875–1975. Burwood, The Presbyterian Ladies College.
  • McFarlane, J.D. 1988. The Golden Hope: Presbyterian Ladies' College, 1888–1988. P.L.C Council, Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney. ISBN 0-9597340-1-5.
  • McFarlane, J.D. 1970, A Brief History of PLC Goulburn, 1921–1970. Goulburn, Goulburn Post.
  • Menzies, W. 1989. Strive to the utmost : a historical account of the occupation of the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Croydon by the Royal Australian Air Force during the World War II. Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney, Croydon N.S.W.
  • Reid, M.O. 1960. The Ladies Came to Stay: A Study of the Education of Girls at the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne 1875–1960. Melbourne, Council of the College.

External links edit

  • Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney website


presbyterian, ladies, college, sydney, other, schools, same, name, presbyterian, ladies, college, disambiguation, sydney, independent, presbyterian, single, early, learning, primary, secondary, boarding, school, girls, located, croydon, inner, western, suburb,. For other schools of the same name see Presbyterian Ladies College disambiguation The Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney PLC Sydney is an independent Presbyterian single sex early learning primary and secondary day and boarding school for girls located in Croydon an inner western suburb of Sydney New South Wales Australia The school has a non selective enrolment policy for all years except Year 11 6 and caters for approximately 1 250 girls from age four Branxton Reception to age eighteen Year 12 including 65 boarders Students attend PLC from all regions of the greater metropolitan area New South Wales and overseas 7 Presbyterian Ladies College SydneyShubra Hall at Croydon PLC main school built 1890LocationCroydon Inner western Sydney New South WalesAustraliaCoordinates33 52 54 S 151 6 57 E 33 88167 S 151 11583 E 33 88167 151 11583InformationTypeIndependent single sex early learning primary and secondary day and boarding schoolMottoLatin Sancte Sapienter Be holy wisely DenominationPresbyterianismEstablished1888 136 years ago 1888 1 Educational authorityNew South Wales Department of EducationOversightPresbyterian Church of AustraliaChairmanDavid LimPrincipalDr Paul BurgisChaplainCassandra MorphewEmployees 131 4 YearsEarly learning and K 12GenderGirlsEnrolmentc 1 250 3 2007 Colour s Black red and white SloganYoung Women of Integrity and Purpose 2 AffiliationsAssociation of Heads of Independent Girls SchoolsAssociation of Heads of Independent Schools of AustraliaJunior School Heads Association of AustraliaAustralian Boarding Schools AssociationRound SquareWebsitewww wbr plc wbr nsw wbr edu wbr au 5 Established in 1888 by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of NSW PLC is the oldest continuously running Presbyterian Church school in its state 8 9 The college is a founding member of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls Schools and is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia the Junior School Heads Association of Australia and the Australian Boarding Schools Association 10 11 12 13 PLC is one of two Sydney schools in the Round Square organisation 14 Notable alumnae include the first qualified female architect in Australia and other pioneering women in education law and medicine Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Growth 1 3 Second World War 2 Principals 3 Campus 4 Curriculum 4 1 Primary 4 2 Secondary 4 3 Special education 5 Co curriculum 5 1 Sport 5 2 Ensembles 5 3 Debating and public speaking 5 4 Aid projects 6 Motto and crest 7 School badge 8 Uniform 8 1 College tartan 9 House system 10 Ex Students Union 10 1 Notable alumnae 11 Gallery 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory editFoundation edit In 1883 the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of NSW formed a special committee to investigate a proposal to establish boarding schools for girls and for boys to provide Presbyterian alternatives to the proliferating number of Roman Catholic secondary schools in the colony 15 The Minister at Richmond Rev James Cameron stated Presbyterians should take prompt action because the Popish party seeing the want that was felt throughout the colony in regard to higher education has stepped in to supply that want and if Protestants did not look to the matter the Roman Catholics would take advantage of them 15 The General Assembly was also inspired to establish a school particularly a Ladies College by less worthy motives Other Protestant denominations in NSW had recently established their own Ladies Colleges and the neighbouring colony of Victoria had maintained a Presbyterian Ladies College since 1875 and so it was felt that NSW Presbyterians should also have one 15 At the 1884 Assembly the Committee announced that while a boys school was not needed the secondary education options available to girls were not satisfactory and they recommended that a Ladies College similar to the Presbyterian Ladies College Melbourne be established as soon as possible 15 A Ladies College Committee was formed and by July 1887 they had leased a property in Ashfield For principal they unanimously selected Dr John Marden a science master from the Methodist Ladies College MLC in Melbourne because of his high academic standing his experience and success in teaching and his high Christian character 16 Marden was a strong believer in equal opportunity in education and has been described as an early feminist 17 He rejected the idea that PLC was to be merely a finishing school for the daughters of the wealthy 18 and was once quoted as saying I am out of sympathy with the cry that education is unnecessary for girls and that all they require is a few accomplishments Women have also to live their life in most cases a harder one than men have This notion of accomplishments being sufficient for girls is surely a remnant of those barbarous days when women were looked on as the plaything of men 18 The Presbyterian Ladies College was finally opened by Marden and lady superintendent M McCormick 19 on 30 January 1888 with 39 girls It was modelled on the great English Public Schools 20 and was the first school to be established by the Presbyterian Church of New South Wales 8 Together with the Committee Marden was responsible for organising the curriculum and hiring the appropriate staff 21 During the opening ceremony the Governor invited his wife the Countess of Jersey Margaret Child Villiers to speak She made what the Sydney Morning Herald described as a capital impromptu speech 20 The Countess speech was widely reported throughout Australia and elsewhere around the world as at the time it was quite unusual for a woman to speak in public 20 PLC s Jersey Day an annual event in which ex students return to the College on the Sunday closest to 10 March is named in honour of the Countess 22 Growth edit In the early years at Croydon girls tended to be enrolled at an older age typically over fourteen It was apparent that despite Marden s insistence many parents viewed the college as a finishing school As today it was not a requirement for students to be Presbyterians and early school records indicate there were a number of Roman Catholic and Jewish students By 1900 the reputation of the school had spread and pupils were starting to come from a wider geographic area including New Caledonia Fiji New Zealand the Northern Territory Western Australia Queensland and South Australia 23 The increase in enrolments also convinced the Council of the need to set up a branch school on another site preferably on the North Shore In 1913 Marden reported that many applications were being refused because of shortness of space 20 The Assembly approved the establishment of a branch at Pymble and gave the Council of PLC Croydon 5 000 to erect new buildings and lay out the grounds The Presbyterian Ladies College Pymble was opened on 8 February 1916 with 48 day girls and 86 boarders Marden became the principal of both schools The opening of the Pymble campus necessitated a change of name for the Croydon College from The Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney to The Presbyterian Ladies College Croydon 20 Marden retired at the end of 1919 and a principal was appointed to each branch Dr E Neil McQueen a prominent educational innovator who had previously been the Vice Principal of the two schools became the second Principal of PLC Croydon 20 In 1918 the school magazine Aurora Australis was first published On the cover it bore a quotation from Thomas Carlyle here hath been dawning another blue day Think wilt thou let it slip useless away 24 Second World War edit In 1941 both the Principal Mary Hamilton and the Senior Mistress novelist critic and historian Flora Eldershaw left the school to fill wartime positions in the bureaucracy In 1942 the new principal Dr Helen Wilkie arrived to find falling enrolments staffing problems and food shortages due to the effects of the Second World War Word was soon received that Australian military authorities wished to inspect the school with a view to taking it over On 24 March 1942 it was requested that PLC be occupied by the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF for the purpose of establishing a top secret Radar Unit and military barracks known as No 1 RIMU Radio Installation and Maintenance Unit 25 26 In order to accommodate PLC s students and classes the Council approached Meriden School in Strathfield Meriden agreed to house the boarders and the singing domestic science and physical education classes PLC also purchased Lingwood a property in Strathfield as a centre for the school s remaining activities 25 At the end of 1942 the Meriden authorities indicated that they could no longer house the PLC boarders so Lauriston Strathfield on The Boulevarde and Welbeck at 18 Margaret Street were rented for them In July 1944 the Council agreed to purchase Lingwood at 16 Margaret Street to house a Kindergarten feeder school for the college or as a site for a permanent move A few months later the Council decided that the future of PLC lay in Strathfield The Croydon campus was offered to the military for 36 500 and plans were made to purchase Welbeck and Lauriston to form the new PLC The Council s preference for Strathfield as a permanent location for the school was not shared by most of the school community 25 and after an intervention by the Education Trust of the NSW General Assembly it was decided that PLC would reopen once again at Croydon in first term 1946 The military agreed to pay for the extensive renovations that were required with the final cheque handed over by the government on 21 March 1949 Lauriston and Welbeck were disposed of in 1946 but the Lingwood property was retained as a preparatory school The Council negotiated with Margaret Thompson the owner and principal of Branxton a private school in Strathfield about moving her school to the Lingwood property where it would retain the name Branxton and come under the control of the PLC Council b 25 Evidence of PLC s wartime occupation remain with tunnels and bomb shelters accessible from below the stage of College Hall A plaque presented to the school by the RAAF in commemoration of PLC s wartime involvement can be found on the school verandah at the entrance to the Main School 25 Earlier Still Freda Whitlam born 1920 sister of Prime Minister Gough Whitlam was principal between 1958 and 1976 It was a period of great social transition In 1968 Miss Whitlam wrote Ours is a world where each year we become more conscious of how quickly and radically our environment is changing Technology is taking the drudgery out of our lives and opening up exciting opportunities for those who have a good general education and are willing to think positively and creatively Here we help the girls with this aim in view 27 In 1970 after Bill McLeod spoke to some of the seniors and advised those intending to become a nurse or a teacher to learn Greek or Italian to aid communication with immigrants Miss Whitlam took up the suggestion We have people with time to do something after the exams at the end of each year let s organise Greek classes for them 28 In March 1972 the school also produced a newsletter ELLHNIKA NEA providing background on Greek culture and language and a bibliography of relevant books in the school library In 1977 a Union of the Congregational Methodist and Presbyterian Churches took place forming the Uniting Church in Australia Approximately one third of the Presbyterian Church decided to remain Presbyterian and consequently the property of the Church had to be divided In May of that year it was announced that PLC Croydon was to remain Presbyterian and PLC Pymble would be transferred with its name changed to Pymble Ladies College Then in 1978 it was decided that PLC Croydon should return to its original name The Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 29 Freda Whitlam took part in the movement to form the Uniting Church and thus ended her principalship of the school She was moderator of the New South Wales Synod of the Uniting Church in Australia 1985 1986 30 In late August 2005 due to financial troubles at the Presbyterian Ladies College Armidale it was announced that PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney would join to form an alliance with both schools coming under the executive leadership of Dr William McKeith the Principal of PLC Sydney Members of the PLC Armidale Council formed part of the new joint school Council essentially making the two PLC s true sister schools 31 The aim of this alliance is to strengthen PLC Armidale through cooperative marketing a change in management and a stronger financial base It is also meant to benefit both schools by providing student exchanges accommodations for sporting events or excursions and an additional country or city option to prospective students Both schools will maintain their separate identities in order to preserve the unique histories and traditions that both have developed over many years 31 PLC celebrated their 120th anniversary in 2008 and to mark the occasion the college commissioned a limited edition commemorative coffee table book PLC Sydney 1888 2008 A Photographic Essay 32 Principals editThe following individuals have served as Principal of PLC Sydney Ordinal Headmaster Qualifications Other key positions held Term start Term end Time in office Notes 1 Dr John Marden BA LLD Melbourne Principal of both Croydon and Pymble Colleges from 1916 1887 1919 31 32 years 21 2 Dr Ewen Neil McQueen MA Melbourne DSc London Vice Principal of both Colleges until 1920 1920 1929 8 9 years 3 Anna Drennan MA Edinburgh Acting Principal at Pymble 1928 1929 1931 1 2 years Acting Principal 4 Mary Hamilton BA DipEd Melbourne 1933 1941 7 8 years 5 Dr Helen Isabella Wilkie MA PhD Edinburgh Principal of PLC Armidale 1938 1941 1942 1945 2 3 years 6 Eunice Macindoe BSc Sydney 1946 1956 9 10 years Alumnae of PLC Sydney Class of 1921 7 Jean Tassie BA 1957 1957 0 years Acting Principal 8 Freda L Whitlam BA Dip Ed Melbourne MA Yale 1958 1976 17 18 years 9 Norma Brown BA DipEd 1977 1977 0 years Acting Principal 10 Patricia Dyson MA DipEd Sydney 1978 1985 6 7 years 11 Dr William T McKeith AM BA Dip Ed Macquarie MA Sydney MBA Leicester EdD Leicester FACE FAIM Principal of both PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney from 2005 1986 2010 23 24 years 33 12 Dr Paul Burgis PhD UNSW MEd DipTchg DipDiv Executive Principal of both PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney 2011 incumbent 12 13 yearsCampus editThe Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney initially opened on 30 January 1888 at Fernlea a 14 room gentleman s residence set on 1 21 hectares 3 acres in Ashfield 15 But by August they had already outgrown this location so they purchased Shubra Hall the home of department store owner Anthony Hordern III at Croydon for 7 500 Plans were drawn up for the additional buildings required and Marden worked closely with the architect Albert Bond Marden was responsible for most of the ideas for the new buildings based on those he had seen at MLC Melbourne 20 Keenly interested in horticulture he also laid out gardens and playing fields 19 By the beginning of the 1891 school year the new site was complete and ready for furnishing as the permanent home of PLC The Presbyterian reported the opening of the College on 10 March 1891 by the Governor of NSW the Rt Hon Victor Albert George 7th Earl of Jersey at its new site Standing in 2 43 hectares 6 acres of ground laid out in lawn tennis courts gardens etc in an elevated position it forms with its tower 84 ft 26 m 26 m high a very conspicuous feature in the landscape The central feature of the building is the tower and the architectural design of the facade is classic Altogether the effect is very imposing The main staircase window is a work of art well worth seeing The central window is beautifully designed and contains two female figures representing Literature and Music 20 By 1902 PLC was running out of space again and Marden urged that new classrooms be built The Council reluctantly agreed and an extension was made to the Main School with six classrooms downstairs and 18 rooms upstairs The addition was completed on 6 October 1904 at a cost of 2 000 20 On 24 March 1942 it was requested that PLC be occupied by the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF for the purpose of establishing a top secret Radar Unit and military barracks known as No 1 RIMU Radio Installation and Maintenance Unit 25 26 PLC s displaced boarders and some of the classrooms found a temporary home at Meriden School in Strathfield The school purchased Lingwood also in Strathfield as a centre for the school s remaining activities 25 At the end of 1942 the Meriden authorities indicated that they could no longer house the PLC boarders so Lauriston now the primary school of Santa Sabina College and Welbeck on The Boulevarde at Strathfield were rented for them The PLC Council nearly kept the school at Strathfield permanently but ultimately it was decided that PLC would reopen once again at Croydon in first term 1946 The military agreed to pay for the extensive renovations that were required Lauriston and Welbeck were disposed of in 1946 and the Lingwood property was retained as a preparatory school 25 Evidence of PLC s wartime occupation remain with tunnels and bomb shelters accessible from below the stage of College Hall A plaque presented to the school by the RAAF in commemoration of PLC s wartime involvement can be found on the school verandah at the entrance to the Main School 25 And so the Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney still sits on a 5 hectares 12 acres campus now adjacent to Croydon Railway Station and within 15 minutes of the Sydney central business district Sydney University and the University of Technology 7 Having grown significantly since its foundation particularly since the 1980s the school today features a mix of 19th century and modern buildings historic landscaped gardens and playing fields 4 Curriculum editThe Presbyterian Ladies College is a comprehensive school with a traditional academic approach designed to prepare students for attending a university 34 The school is registered and accredited with the New South Wales Education Standards Authority 35 and therefore follows the mandated curriculum for all years Primary edit Students in stages 1 to 3 Kindergarten to Year 6 study the six Key Learning Areas English Mathematics History Geography Science and Technology Creative Arts Personal Development Health and Physical Education PD H PE The youngest students also follow the Reggio Emilia approach to education Specialist extension courses are offered to select students from Year 2 to 6 with gifts and talents in special areas SPEC 34 Secondary edit Subjects offered to stage 4 students Years 7 and 8 include English Mathematics Science Geography History French Mandarin Latin Japanese German Italian Design and Technology Visual Arts Music PDHPE Computing and Religious Education The Excelsior class is an enrichment programme offered to gifted students in this stage and includes additional classes such as Philosophy and Olympiad activities 34 In stage 5 Years 9 and 10 students are prepared for the School Certificate and study a programme that comprises two elective classes and Religious Education as well as the courses mandated by the Board of Studies The compulsory core subjects are English Mathematics Science Australian History and Geography and PDHPE Electives are chosen from Elective History Elective Geography French German Mandarin Latin Japanese Italian Commerce Drama Design and Technology Textiles and Design Music Visual Arts and Physical Activity and Sports Science In Year 10 the Excelsior class begins its study of the 1 Unit Higher School Certificate HSC course in Studies of Religion 34 In the final school stage Years 11 and 12 students are prepared for the New South Wales HSC The curriculum at this stage has a clear university orientation The Board of Studies requires stage 6 students to study a minimum of 12 units in the Preliminary Year and 10 units in their HSC Year most subjects being worth 2 units HSC English is compulsory Standard and Advanced Extension courses as well as 2 unit English as a Second Language are also offered Students may then choose from all levels of Mathematics Senior Science Biology Chemistry Physics Modern History Ancient History Business Studies Economics Geography Legal studies French German Latin Japanese Italian Indonesian Beginners Mandarin Design and Technology Textiles and Design Food Technology Visual Arts Music Course 1 and 2 Drama and PDHPE 34 University entry levels are high following the completion of stage 6 Each year approximately 50 of graduating PLC students receive a Universities Admission Index UAI higher than 90 36 In the 2006 Higher School Certificate a PLC student received a perfect UAI score of 100 37 and in 2007 The Daily Telegraph named PLC the best performing independent school in Sydney s inner west 38 Special education edit PLC also offers a unique special education unit catering to students with mild to moderate intellectual disabilities The transition programme was developed in 1992 in response to a decision by academic staff to provide a special needs stream Through this unit up to 20 girls between the ages of 11 and 18 are provided with an individual curriculum incorporating mainstream classes where possible 39 Senior students focus on the NESA Life Skills programme Girls spend time as residential students in the on campus Transition House learning to manage their lives independently Transition students also run an outdoor cafe to gain small business skills 39 Co curriculum editSport edit PLC Sydney is arguably one of Australia s best girls sporting schools 40 The college has been a member of the Independent Girls Schools Sporting Association IGSSA since its foundation in 1922 41 and through this association senior students compete against 27 other girls schools in graded weekend sports and carnivals Sports available to students through IGSSA include swimming diving rowing cross country athletics gymnastics softball tennis basketball soccer Field hockey netball cricket and water polo 42 The college also offers sports such as skiing snowboarding equestrian and badminton through other competitions 41 In 2007 PLC won three IGSSA carnival premierships in diving for the ninth consecutive year swimming 43 and gymnastics 44 Primary school girls have the opportunity to participate in interschool sports through PLC s membership in the New South Wales branch of the Junior School Heads Association of Australia JSHAA 41 Students with special sporting talent are provided a pathway to compete at the highest level available at PLC IGSSA JSHAA Combined Independent Schools state representation at School Sport Australia and Commonwealth and Olympic level 45 In September 2007 the college broke the under 19 female Australian record for 24 hour non stop rowing with a distance of 337 kilometres 209 mi 46 Also in 2007 PLC was named the New South Wales School Snowsports Club of the Year by the NSW Snowsports Association 47 later winning the national award at the 2007 Ski and Snowboard Australia Awards 48 The 2008 rowing season has been one of the school s best to date In March the PLC 1st Eight crew won the Schoolgirl Eight race at the IGSSA regatta for the first time in the school s history 49 This crew was also successful at the 2008 Australian Rowing Championships winning the A Final of the Schoolgirls Eight race the Sydney Cup ahead of St Catherine s School Toorak and Pymble Ladies College thus ranking them as the best schoolgirl eight in Australia 50 51 Ensembles edit Junior and Senior School students can participate in musical ensembles both selective and non selective including several bands string orchestras a full school orchestra chamber music ensembles choral groups and several smaller instrumental and vocal groups 52 Debating and public speaking edit One of the strengths of PLC Sydney is their long history of achievement in debating and public speaking The college has competed in the Independent Schools Debating Association ISDA for the past five years 53 and has had a long standing commitment to the Archdale Debating Competition PLC students have had success at the semi final level 54 and they won the competition in 2006 and 2017 55 PLC Sydney enters teams in the Junior and Senior sections of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls Schools AHIGS Festival of Speech producing the best results of any AHIGS school over the history of the competition with 10 consecutive wins in the competition s 12 year history Students may also participate in the Macquarie Cup and the Commonwealth Bank Senior Debating vying with students from a range of public Catholic and independent schools There are also Social Debates with surrounding schools as well as a regular competition with Trinity Grammar School called the PLC Trinity Challenge 54 Aid projects edit The PLC Overseas Aid Fund has been established to enhance the college s work with aid projects in developing countries and is an important part of the school s Round Square membership 56 Current projects undertaken by the school include the establishment and on going management of two Kindergartens in East Timor 57 the management and support of Birla Children s Orphanage in Vietnam and the establishment of the Adopt a School programme This programme was developed and is directed by the principal Dr McKeith and matches schools in Australia with schools in Sri Lanka requiring rebuilding following the 2004 Tsunami PLC s school allocated through this programme is the Senehasa Counselling Training and Rehabilitation Centre for Girls 58 Motto and crest edit nbsp Collectable Cigarette card featuring the PLC colours and crest c 1910 s The school crest was adopted at a College Council meeting on 23 August 1888 The College Council decided to use the same crest as that used by the Presbyterian Church of New South Wales with minor modifications 59 The Church s crest consisted of a shield with the words Nec Tamen Consumebatur translated from Latin as And yet it was not consumed surrounding it 60 On the shield were the stars of the Southern Cross a burning bush and a Latin cross in outline At the base were the floral emblems of Scotland England and Ireland Surrounding the shield was a border with the words Presbyterian Church of New South Wales with a Star of David placed on top Behind both shield and borders was the cross of St Andrew in blue 59 The school modified this crest by changing the words Presbyterian Church of New South Wales to Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney placing a Maltese cross at the top of the shield and inserting the School motto Sancte Sapienter The motto had been adopted by the school on 23 August 1888 and although no translation was given of the Latin it may be loosely translated to be holy wisely or holy wisely 59 School badge edit nbsp PLC Sydney school badge The school s highly symbolic badge was inspired by the first principal Dr Marden and designed in 1888 by the first art teacher J A Bennett The maiden on the lion represents Knowledge which is crowned by a tower representing the home and holding a trident representing Sovereignty A laurel wreath represents the victory of true womanhood while the sun symbolises light and energy and the crescent moon stands for youth The words Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney surround the badge 61 The motto All ultimo lavoro is Italian and comes from Dante s Commedia Paradiso I 13 It has variously been translated as for the crowning task strive for the highest the utmost for the highest or I work for the highest 61 with the first of these being the most direct translation The badge is reproduced in the leadlight over the front door of Shubra Hall 61 and may also be found on the recently opened Ex Students pathway It was traditionally worn as part of the uniform on the Tam o Shanter until it was phased out in 1995 The badge is currently not worn on the academic uniform partially due to its adoption by Pymble Ladies College as their school crest in 1977 61 It was however reintroduced in 2003 as an addition to the Beret of the PLC Pipes and Drums uniform and is also used by the college s Ex students Union as it has been since 1905 with the addition of the words Ex students Union below 61 Uniform editWhen the college first opened in 1888 there was no uniform instead the girls wore long cotton dresses gloves and hat A straw boater was introduced in the early 20th century worn with a red and white hat band featuring the college crest with its burning bush woven into it in red During this time Prefects wore red silk arm bands embroidered with a gold crest 62 The distinctive Black Watch Tartan of the college was introduced in 1908 Senior girls wore heavy box pleated skirts and white blouses junior girls wore pinafore dresses All girls wore a navy blazer and heavy woollen stockings Prefects also wore a special hat badge with a ring of bright blue enamel A black felt Breton was introduced for winter use and no change was made until the introduction of the green beret in 1952 62 The current uniform for Year 11 and 12 was introduced in 1966 It was designed by the senior students of 1965 and consists of a Black Watch kilt white blouse green blazer green jumper or vest black stockings for winter and bottle green knee high socks for summer and black leather lace up shoes Girls of Scottish origin are permitted wear the kilt pin representing their family or clan name rather than the standard school pin A green and Black Watch Tam o Shanter known as the Beret was also introduced for all grades a few years earlier 62 The girls found the school s distinctive Beret difficult to wear so it was phased out in 1995 63 It was replaced by the current Panama hat but the Beret was reintroduced in 2003 as an addition to the Pipes and Drums uniform The current junior R 10 uniform was introduced in 1997 In summer girls are required to wear a Black Watch tunic short sleeve white blouse green blazer with tartan piping short green socks and black leather shoes The winter uniform consists of the tunic long sleeve white blouse the blazer green jumper or vest Black Watch Tartan tie Black Watch Tartan scarf and either green knee high socks or black stockings 64 School pockets are awarded for student achievements and are embroidered in red on the pockets of junior blazers R 10 girls and white on the left breast of senior blazers 11 12 girls College tartan edit The school has adopted the Black Watch Tartan of the Royal Highland Regiment as its school and Pipes and Drums uniform PLC was granted permission to wear the tartan after its brother school The Scots College was issued a royal decree allowing them to use Black Watch as their Pipes amp Drums and Cadets uniform The Black Watch is the oldest of the highland regiments The 1958 Aurora Australis the school yearbook explained the tartan s origin This tartan was specially designed for the regiment to prevent the jealousy which would have been aroused if any existing clan tartan had been used 65 House system editThe house system was established by Dr John Marden shortly after the opening of the school with three houses East West and Boarders In 1924 the senior houses were reorganised and renamed Kinross Harper and Ferguson with Anderson added in 1968 followed in 1926 by the introduction of junior houses named Vicars and McQueen with Thompson added in 1937 66 The school moved to four houses in 1979 from primary to secondary and thus the junior houses disappeared 66 Finally two new houses named Pickard and Wilkie were introduced in 1995 The Houses are named after women and men who have made a significant contribution to the life of the college 67 Anderson Mrs E O Anderson 1885 1985 attended PLC from 1898 to 1902 She was an original member of the Committee of the Ex Students Union in 1906 then President 1927 1932 and Patroness from 1936 In 1932 she petitioned the Assembly for the appointment of women to the PLC Council Anderson was a member of the Council 1932 1958 and a benefactor to the college all her life 67 Ferguson Rev John Ferguson 1852 1925 was a minister of St Stephen s Church Sydney and in 1917 Acting Principal of St Andrew s College at the University of Sydney He was appointed Senior Chaplain and Chairman of the PLC Council in 1913 serving until 1923 67 Harper Rev Dr Andrew Harper 1844 1936 was the third Principal of PLC Melbourne 1879 1888 He then lectured at Ormond Theological College Melbourne before coming to Sydney where he was Principal of St Andrew s College 1902 1923 He was Chairman of the PLC Council from 1907 until 1913 67 Kinross Rev Dr John Kinross 1833 1908 was a Presbyterian minister at Kiama 1858 1875 He then became Principal of St Andrew s College from 1875 until 1901 and Chairman of the PLC Council from 1888 until 1906 67 68 Pickard Marion Pickard was appointed to the college as a teaching governess in June 1888 She was Lady Superintendent from 1894 until her resignation in 1907 In 1905 Pickard was elected the first President of the Ex Students Union 67 Wilkie Dr Helen Wilkie 1895 1984 was the second Headmistress at PLC Armidale 1938 1941 and then the fourth Principal of PLC Sydney 1942 1946 On her appointment to Croydon she was immediately confronted with the takeover by the RAAF and organised the move of the College to Strathfield 67 Ex Students Union editThe Ex Students Union is the school s alumnae association inaugurated on the evening of 9 December 1905 At the invitation of Dr Marden several former students discussed the proposal elected Marion Pickard who was at that time Lady Superintendent as their President and formed a committee to produce a constitution These actions were confirmed at a General Meeting on Jersey Day 1906 and the committee took office until 1907 In the beginning the main objectives of the Union were the accumulation of a special fund to be devoted to the erection of a chapel and library at the College and an Ex Students prize to be awarded annually to the girl most proficient in work and sport d 69 The Union achieved much in its first few years renting a building in the CBD to serve as a club and committee meeting place making garments for hospitals visiting kindergartens the YWCA Home of Peace Infants Home and the Royal Institute for Deaf and Blind Children An Ex Students Orchestra and Dramatic Club were formed and tennis and croquet matches were held between current and former pupils 69 nbsp Florence Taylor Class of 1896 In 1916 the Pymble College was opened and its first Ex Students Union expressed an interest in joining that of PLC Subsequently a combined Union was formed known as the PLC Croydon and Pymble Ex Students Union and an Ex Students prize was established at Pymble on the same conditions as at Croydon 69 One of the Union s most significant contributions to the school was planned following the death of Dr Marden in 1924 With the desire to provide Marden with a fitting and lasting memorial 69 it was decided that a library to be called the John Marden Memorial Library should be built at the Croydon College This building was opened by Mrs Marden in 1927 and although no longer suitable as a library due its size it remains a treasured part of the school 69 In 1929 it was proposed that Pymble students should form a separate Union 69 and that an equitable division of Union funds should be undertaken This explains the two separate groups that exist today however it is still not uncommon for Pymble students to attend Croydon reunions and events particularly regional or interstate activities 69 Notable alumnae edit Main article List of Old Girls of PLC Sydney Alumnae of the Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney are commonly referred to as PLC Old Girls and may elect to join the schools alumnae association the PLC Ex Students Union 69 Notable among these women are Sibyl Morrison the first female barrister in New South Wales 70 Marie Byles the first practicing female solicitor in New South Wales 71 Jessie Aspinall the first female junior resident medical officer at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 72 Florence Mary Taylor the first qualified female architect and first woman to train as an engineer in Australia and the first woman in Australia to fly in a heavier than air craft 73 and Annabelle Williams Commonwealth Games Medallist and current world record holder of the EAD 100m freestyle S9 classification Gallery edit nbsp Fernlea PLC s first home in Ashfield c 1888 nbsp PLC s first principal Dr John Marden nbsp Shubra Hall and PLC students 1892 nbsp Sketch of PLC featuring gardens and the Shubra Hall and Main School towers c 1935 nbsp Advertisement for PLC at its temporary residence in Strathfield 1942 nbsp Lauriston Part of PLC s wartime Strathfield campus nbsp PLC Sydney 120 year anniversary logo nbsp PLC pupils doing eurythmics c 1930 s nbsp Tennis courts at Croydon 1894See also edit nbsp Schools portal nbsp Reformed Christianity portal List of non government schools in New South Wales List of boarding schools in Australia List of pipe bands Head of the River New South Wales Vietnam Australia School Hanoi Shubra HallNotes edit Branxton served as a co educational prep school for the college until 1996 when it was sold to Meriden School and its name reverted to Lingwood The proposal to build a Chapel was abandoned in 1907 and subsequently no Chapel has ever been erected at PLC References edit Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Directory Sydney s Child Archived from the original on 24 October 2007 Retrieved 29 October 2007 PLC Connections PDF Publications Presbyterian Ladies College 9 August 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 14 August 2007 Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney P L C Sydney New South Wales School Choice Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 14 February 2007 a b Educational and Financial Report 2007 PDF About PLC Sydney Presbyterian Ladies College 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 30 June 2008 The School Crest Sancte Sapienter Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 15 June 2007 Regulations amp Applications PDF Enrolment Enquiry Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 2007 p 5 Archived from the original PDF on 1 September 2007 Retrieved 14 October 2007 a b About PLC Sydney PLC Sydney Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 14 August 2007 a b McFarlane John 1988 Foreword The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 p vii Hills Brenden 29 January 2008 It s a matter of principal News Inner Western Courier p 8 Retrieved 29 January 2008 dead link Heads of New South Wales Independent Girls Schools AHIGS The Association of Heads of Independent Girls Schools 2007 Archived from the original on 16 March 2007 Retrieved 6 August 2007 AHISA Schools New South Wales Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia April 2007 Archived from the original on 13 July 2007 Retrieved 19 June 2007 JSHAA New South Wales Directory of Members New South Wales Branch Junior School Heads Association of Australia 2007 Archived from the original on 17 January 2008 Retrieved 27 July 2007 Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Schools Australian Boarding Schools Association 2007 Archived from the original on 6 May 2007 Retrieved 14 August 2007 Round Square Application International Presbyterian Ladies College 2007 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 a b c d e McFarlane John 1988 Genesis 1883 1887 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 1 4 McFarlane John 1988 Firm Foundations 1888 1919 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 p 9 The Girls of PLC have made history Northern Herald The Sydney Morning Herald 6 April 1988 p 26 Retrieved 12 September 2007 a b McFarlane John 1988 Firm Foundations 1888 1919 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 p 18 a b Dougan Alan 1986 John Marden 1855 1924 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 10 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 10 August 2007 a b c d e f g h i McFarlane John 1988 Firm Foundations 1888 1919 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 29 37 a b Principals History Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 2 July 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Jersey Day and its Origin The Ex students Union News The Annual Newsletter of the Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Ex students Union No 75 September 2006 p 1 McFarlane John 1988 Firm Foundations 1888 1919 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 24 26 Thomas Carlyle Today 1840 a b c d e f g h i McFarlane John 1988 War And Disruption 1942 1945 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 89 98 a b Bellamy Craig 2007 Tributes Frank Cooper PDF Radar Returns Signals amp Echoes for RAAF Radar Veterans Vol 12 no 1 Hampton Victoria published March 2007 p 3 Retrieved 26 August 2007 F L Whitlam What this School Means to Me 80th Anniversary 1888 1968 An Historical Review Presbyterian Ladies College Croydon p 7 ELLHNIKA NEA P L C Croydon Greek News March 1972 McFarlane John 1988 Preparation For Expansion 1977 1985 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 p 129 Who s Who in Australia 2012 p 2349 a b Falls Jeof September 2005 New Partnership between PLC Armidale and PLC Sydney PDF Church Offices Newsletter No 288 Surry Hills The Presbyterian Church in New South Wales p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 31 August 2007 Retrieved 28 June 2007 Celebrating 120 Years of Excellence PDF PLC Connections Presbyterian Ladies College 29 November 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Suzannah Pearce ed 17 November 2006 McKEITH William T Who s Who in Australia Live North Melbourne Vic Crown Content Pty Ltd a b c d e Curriculum Overview Curriculum Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Non Government Registered Schools List Letter P Board of Studies NSW New South Wales Government 18 October 2007 Archived from the original on 17 April 2008 Retrieved 29 October 2007 Prospectus PDF Enrolment Enquiry Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original PDF on 1 September 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Smith Leesa 18 January 2007 Nikki notches a perfect result Education Inner Western Courier Archived from the original on 26 May 2008 Retrieved 8 October 2007 How schools performed by region NSW ACT Sydney The Daily Telegraph 27 December 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2008 a b Croshaw Perrie 8 February 2007 Special needs met Supplement The Sydney Morning Herald p 2 Retrieved 8 October 2007 McKeith William Principal s Welcome PDF The Principal Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 8 October 2007 a b c Overview of Sports at PLC PLC Sydney Sport amp PDHPE Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 8 October 2007 Welcome to IGSSA IGSSA Online Independent Girls Schools Sporting Association Archived from the original on 29 August 2007 Retrieved 8 October 2007 Adamson Chloe 8 October 2007 PLC breaks 10 year drought Sport The Inner Western Courier p 191 Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 Retrieved 8 October 2007 Gowan A 29 October 2007 WAG and Overall Results 2007 Carnivals Gymnastics Independent Girls Schools Sporting Association Archived from the original xls on 20 July 2008 Retrieved 29 October 2007 Specialities Sport Cocurricular Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Smith Leesa 11 September 2007 An oarsome fundraising effort Learn The Inner Western Courier p 43 Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 Retrieved 8 October 2007 PLC Sydney wins school snowsports club of the year PDF PLC Connections Presbyterian Ladies College 8 November 2007 p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 11 November 2007 2007 Ski and Snowboard Australia Award Winners NSW Interschools Snow Sports Development Foundation 27 November 2007 Archived from the original on 30 August 2007 Retrieved 24 December 2007 AHIGS IGSSA Sunday 2 March 2008 AHIGS IGSSA Regatta NSW Rowing Association Inc 2 March 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2008 2008 Australian Rowing Championships Day 7 PDF 2008 Australian Rowing Championships and Interstate Regatta NSW Rowing Association Inc 9 March 2008 p 17 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Brady Fiona 26 March 2008 PLC s great eight take national championship Sport Sydney NSW Inner West Weekly Retrieved 26 March 2008 dead link Extra Curricular Ensembles Cocurricular Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Participating Schools Schools Independent Schools Debating Association Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 21 June 2007 a b Specialities Debating Cocurricular Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Archdale Shield Competition Results Archdale Debating Competition 2006 Archived from the original on 1 April 2004 Retrieved 23 April 2007 PLC Overseas Aid Fund Service Learning Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 28 November 2006 Retrieved 23 April 2007 East Timor Project Service Learning Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Adopt a School International Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 a b c McFarlane John 1988 The School Crest And Motto The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 Croydon NSW P L C Council Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney p 297 ISBN 0 9597340 1 5 An Introduction to the Presbyterian Church of Australia PDF Sydney Code Committee of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Australia 2004 p 21 Archived from the original PDF on 29 August 2007 Retrieved 6 August 2007 a b c d e McFarlane John 1988 The School Badge The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 p 299 a b c McFarlane John 1988 The School Uniform The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 309 311 Happenings Aurora Australis The Magazine of the Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1995 Boarding House Handbook PDF Boarding Presbyterian Ladies College 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 1 September 2007 Retrieved 21 June 2007 Tartan of the Black Watch Aurora Australis The Magazine of the Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1958 a b McFarlane John 1988 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 65 amp 138 a b c d e f g House System History Presbyterian Ladies College Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Dougan Alan 1974 John Kinross 1833 1908 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 5 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 23 April 2007 a b c d e f g h McFarlane John 1988 The Ex Students Union The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney 1888 1988 pp 312 317 O Brien Joan M 1986 Morrison Sibyl Enid 1895 1961 Morrison Sibyl Enid Vera Munro 1895 1961 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 10 Online ed Melbourne Melbourne University Press p 596 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Marie Byles A Spirited Life PDF National Trust Online Exhibition The National Trust of Australia NSW 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 4 November 2006 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Durie E Beatrix 1979 Aspinall Jessie Strahorn 1880 1953 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 7 Online ed Melbourne Melbourne University Press p 118 Retrieved 1 August 2007 Heywood Anne 4 July 2002 Taylor Florence Mary 1879 1969 Australian Women Biographical Entry National Foundation for Australian Women Retrieved 1 August 2007 Further reading editButt M F 1978 Presbyterian Ladies College Orange A Journal Orange G H Craig Coleman M 1991 This is Pymble College The First 75 years 1916 1991 Pymble Ladies College Diamond Jubilee Year Book PLC Croydon 1948 Fitzpatrick K 1975 PLC Melbourne The First Century 1875 1975 Burwood The Presbyterian Ladies College McFarlane J D 1988 The Golden Hope Presbyterian Ladies College 1888 1988 P L C Council Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney ISBN 0 9597340 1 5 McFarlane J D 1970 A Brief History of PLC Goulburn 1921 1970 Goulburn Goulburn Post Menzies W 1989 Strive to the utmost a historical account of the occupation of the Presbyterian Ladies College Croydon by the Royal Australian Air Force during the World War II Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Croydon N S W Reid M O 1960 The Ladies Came to Stay A Study of the Education of Girls at the Presbyterian Ladies College Melbourne 1875 1960 Melbourne Council of the College External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney Presbyterian Ladies College Sydney website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presbyterian Ladies 27 College Sydney amp oldid 1223191322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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