Garin College
Address
35 Champion Rd,
Saxton,
Nelson,
New Zealand
Coordinates41°20′09″S 173°12′19″E / 41.3357°S 173.2052°E / -41.3357; 173.2052
Information
TypeIntegrated secondary (year 9–13) co-ed
MottoSmall School, Big Heart
Established2002; 21 years ago
Ministry of Education Institution no.6975
PrincipalMr John Maguire[1]
School roll603[2] (April 2023)
Socio-economic decile8
Websitewww.garincollege.ac.nz

Garin College is a New Zealand Catholic, integrated, co-educational day and boarding secondary school in Nelson on the northern outskirts of Richmond. The college opened on 28 January 2002 to serve the Catholic community, particularly in the upper South Island.

The college is named after Father Antoine Marie Garin (1810–1889) who was the founding pastor of the Catholic Church in Nelson. The proprietor of the school is the Catholic Archbishop of Wellington.

Houses

Garin College has four houses. The houses all have individual names and are represented by colours. Siblings enrolled at the college are often put in the same house.

  • Aubert, Blue House
  • Barbier, Green house
  • MacKillop, Yellow house
  • McAuley, Red house

Boarding hostels

The school has accommodation for up to 56 boarders from outlying areas in its boarding hostel, separated into two houses by gender: Francis Douglas House for male students; and Mother Teresa House for female students.[3]

Haka

The college's haka was written and performed for the first time in 2006, four years after the school first opened. It was first unveiled to the school and spectators at the 2006 annual Te Wairua o nga Mahi Toi festival. It was the opening act on the 2006 final Mahi Toi night.[4]

Principals

  • John Boyce (2002-2015)
  • John Maguire (2016-present)

Notable alumni & students

References

  1. Maij, Sara (7 June 2016). "Garin College deputy principal retires after 40 year career". The Nelson Mail.
  2. "New Zealand Schools Directory". New Zealand Ministry of Education. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  3. "Garin College Hostel". Garin College. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  4. Boyce, John. "Mahi Toi Opening Address". Archived from the original on 10 July 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
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