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Christian Brothers’ College Kimberley (“CBC”), the first Christian Brothers’ College (School) in South Africa, was founded by the Christian Brothers from Ireland, UK on 8 September 1897. It is situated in Kimberley, Northern Cape, South Africa. The founder was E.I.Rice. It is a Catholic High School. [1]
Southdowns College, Irene; Sutherland High School, Eldoraigne; Tshwane Muslim School; Mamelodi High School; Afrikaanse Hoër Meisieskool; Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool; Christian Brothers' College, Mount Edmund; Clapham High School; Cornerstone College; Crawford College, Pretoria; CVO Skool Pretoria; Hillview High School; Hoërskool Menlopark ...
Christian Brothers' College, St John's Parklands – Cape Town, Western Cape; Christian Brothers' College, St Joseph's – Bloemfontein, Free State; St Dominic's College – Welkom, Free State; St. Boniface High School – Kimberley, Northern Cape (est. 1951; Christian Brothers withdrew) St Patrick's Christian Brothers’ College – Kimberley ...
St Mark's College, Jane Furse; St. Patrick's Christian Brothers' College, Kimberley; Stanger Manor Secondary School; Stanger Secondary School; Stellenberg High School; Sutherland High School, Centurion
Boksburg High School is a public high school in Boksburg, a suburb of Ekurhuleni, South Africa. The school was founded in 1920 as the Rand East Training and Preparatory College under its first Principal, Mr Charter. [ 1 ]
Fifth Boys Gymnasium of Thessaloniki (closed) A non-profit public secondary school in the city of Thessaloniki's Analipsi neighborhood, comprised 3-year junior high school and 3-year high school (six-grade), and also Higher Education entrance education.
The Kimberley location of St. Boniface High School was for years a mission church and school run for native Africans by German priests and nuns. By 1950, the St. Boniface Mission School, which included elementary through high school grades, had grown so large that the parish leadership had decided that a male religious order would be better suited to the size and stature of the school.
Ds. James Murray Louw [1] studied for the ministry at Victoria College, Stellenbosch. The first Nederduitse Gereformeerde church in Boksburg was a wood and iron building on the corner of Market and Trichardts streets, opposite Market Square, where the Old Town Hall is situated. Ds. Louw was the second minister for the Boksburg congregation. [2]