Mount Hermon School, Darjeeling

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Mount Hermon School
Mounthermonsch.jpg
Location
,
India
Coordinates27°03′56″N 88°15′02″E / 27.0655829°N 88.2506905°E / 27.0655829; 88.2506905Coordinates: 27°03′56″N 88°15′02″E / 27.0655829°N 88.2506905°E / 27.0655829; 88.2506905
Information
TypePrivate
MottoNon Scholæ Sed Vitæ Discimus
Established11 March 1895
ChairmanBishop Dr. Phillip S. Masih
AdministratorKamalaksha Sardar
HeadmasterPartha P Dey
CampusDarjeeling
Colour(s)Yellow, dark blue
Websitemhsdarj1895.org

Mount Hermon School is a co-educational Christian boarding school in the town of Darjeeling, in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is located in North Point, Singmari. It follows the American education style, rather than the British style in vogue in the other schools of the area.[clarification needed] It prepares children for ICSE (for grade 10) and ISC (for grade 12).[1][2][3][4] Mount Hermon offers classes in science, humanities, and commerce. More than 25 languages are spoken among the student body.[citation needed]

History[edit]

Mount Hermon School was founded in 1895 by Emma L.Knowles of the British Methodist Episcopal Church, who became its first principal.[5] The school was first known as Arcadia and later as Queen's Hill School. It was originally a girls' school, with a small department for junior boys. In 1926, the school was moved to North Point, where the main building was erected in the Mount Hermon Estate, purchased from Lebong Tea Company during a slump in the tea market for a relatively low price by Bishop Fisher. The new building was opened in May[year needed] by the Earl of Lytton, Governor of Bengal and was described as "designed in Collegiate Gothic with Tudor arches and mullioned windows dominating it". The school grew and expanded into a co-educational school with a separate hostel area.

In 1918, the total enrollment was 163 students, and by 1929, the number of students grew to some 200 students, three quarters of them young women. In 1930, the school was renamed and had two wings: Queen's Hill School for Girls and Bishop Fisher's School for Boys. In the years under principal David Stewart, enrollment grew to 400 students, and in 1963, the multipurpose Stewart Building was opened next to the main building. Later, The Mount Hermon College of Education for undergraduate teacher trainees was added, as well as more hostels and laboratories.

Campus[edit]

The school stands on 28 hectares (70 acres) in the Himalayan foothills, 1,900 metres (6,200 ft) above sea-level and 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) north of Darjeeling. It can accommodate 450 boarding students.

The main building has a three-storey structure of native grey stone and reinforced concrete, with a northern facade of 61 metres (200 ft) facing across the valley at Kanchenjunga. To the south are two wings, the west housing the chapel and assembly hall, and the east including classrooms, dormitories, and staff accommodations. All girls and the younger boys are housed in dormitories in the main building, which also contains an Infant Department and Junior School classrooms, a music room and practice rooms for piano, staff and students' dining rooms, lounge, library, craft room, and administrative offices. Senior boys (from class 10 to 12) reside in Fernhill and students from class 7 to 9 in the Round Hostel, opened in 1977, while junior boys reside in the Stewart Building, built in 1963.

The Stewart Building also includes six classrooms for the senior school, and laboratories for physics, chemistry, biology, and geography.

Notable alumni[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Brenton H. Badley, Visions and Victories in Hindustan: A Story of the Mission Stations of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Southern Asia, pp 423-430 – "Darjeeling" by Ms Kate A. Blair
  2. Hazel Innes Craig, Under the Old School Topee, BACSA, 1990
  3. John N. Hollister, The Century of the Methodist Church in Southern Asia, 1956, Lucknow Publishing House, India, p 182
  4. Annual Journal, Bengal Regional Conference 31st Session, 1 to 4 May 2014
  5. "Overview - Mount Hermon School, Darjeeling".

External links[edit]