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Timbertop is a full-time boarding, co-educational campus of Geelong Grammar School located near Mansfield, Victoria, Australia. It shares its name with Mount Timbertop, which towers directly over the school. [1] A view toward the summit of Mount Timbertop, as seen from the school grounds. A map of the Timbertop Campus, Merrijig, VIC
Geelong Grammar School is a private Anglican co-educational boarding and day school. The school's main campus is located in Corio on the northern outskirts of Geelong, Victoria , Australia, overlooking Corio Bay and Limeburners Bay .
Wilson married Oriana Maria Rowcroft (died in 1911) at Geelong on 7 April 1863. She was a daughter of Horatio Nelson "Horace" Rowcroft (1806–1878), editor of the Geelong Advertiser 1867–1869, and brother of Charles Rowcroft. They had two daughters: Oriana Mary "May" Bracebridge-Wilson married Albert Finchett Garrard on 27 June 1894. [4]
The following are notable boarding schools in Australia. There are 189 boarding schools in Australia. ... Geelong College, Geelong; Geelong Grammar School, Geelong;
This is a list of notable Old Geelong Grammarians, they being notable former students - known as "Old Geelong Grammarians" of the Anglican Church school, Geelong Grammar School and old girls of The Hermitage and Clyde School in Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
Day & Boarding 1958 The Geelong College: Newtown, Geelong: Peter Miller 1,313 1861 Associated with the Uniting Church [5] Boys & Girls Day & Boarding 1908 Geelong Grammar School: Corio, Geelong, Toorak, Timbertop. Rebecca Cody 1,463 1855 Anglican: Boys & Girls Day & Boarding 1900 Haileybury: Brighton, Berwick, Keysborough, City, Tianjin, Darwin ...
Sir James Ralph Darling, CMG, OBE (18 June 1899 – 1 November 1995) was the English-born Australian headmaster of Geelong Grammar School (1930–1961), and Chairman of the Australian Broadcasting Commission (1961–1967).
The first schools in Geelong were established when the town was settled from the 1850s. Many of these schools remain open today, now joined by a number of new schools opened from the 1950s when the population of Geelong grew after World War II. King Charles III spent two terms at the Timbertop campus of Geelong Grammar School in 1966.