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After the war then Minister of Education ] open the ] in 1950 at ]; which was created to "accommodate the overflow of students Royal Primary who could not gain admission to Royal College". 112 students who could not gain admission to Royal College Colombo along with 26 other students were enrolled at the new Senior Government School.<ref>, Dailynews</ref> | After the war then Minister of Education ] open the ] in 1950 at ]; which was created to "accommodate the overflow of students Royal Primary who could not gain admission to Royal College". 112 students who could not gain admission to Royal College Colombo along with 26 other students were enrolled at the new Senior Government School.<ref>, Dailynews</ref> | ||
In 1952 Greenlands College (current ] Colombo) was established with partial intake of students from Royal Preparatory School. <ref></ref> | |||
From 1966 to 1969, ] was built specially designed for local drama and music which required open air type auditorium in accordance to ]. On 2 March 1972, Ceylon became a republic when the new Republican Constitution was passed by the Parliament that met at the Royal Primary School Hall. | From 1966 to 1969, ] was built specially designed for local drama and music which required open air type auditorium in accordance to ]. On 2 March 1972, Ceylon became a republic when the new Republican Constitution was passed by the Parliament that met at the Royal Primary School Hall. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
==See also== | |||
* ] Colombo | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 19:32, 4 April 2013
Preparatory school in Colombo, CeylonRoyal Preparatory School | |
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Location | |
Colombo Ceylon | |
Information | |
Type | Preparatory school |
Established | 1933 |
Affiliation | Royal College Colombo |
Royal Preparatory School (also known as Royal Primary School or Royal Junior School) was a preparatory school in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka).
History
It was established in 1933 as a preparatory school to prepare students to the Royal College Colombo which was situated next to it (until the 1960s there was an entrance exam for its students). In 1944 it was evacuated to the Glendale Bungalow in Bandarawela, where it remained until 1948.
After the war then Minister of Education Major E. A. Nugawela open the Government Senior School in 1950 at Thurstan Road; which was created to "accommodate the overflow of students Royal Primary who could not gain admission to Royal College". 112 students who could not gain admission to Royal College Colombo along with 26 other students were enrolled at the new Senior Government School.
From 1966 to 1969, Royal Primary School Hall was built specially designed for local drama and music which required open air type auditorium in accordance to Natya Shastra. On 2 March 1972, Ceylon became a republic when the new Republican Constitution was passed by the Parliament that met at the Royal Primary School Hall.
The school was augmented with Royal College Colombo in December 1977, becoming the Primary School of Royal College Colombo which exists to this day. The school was a government administered school with its own head master; the post still exists today as the post of head master/mistress of the Primary School staffed by a Deputy Principal.
Notable alumni
- Ranil Wickremasinghe, MP - former Prime Minister of Sri Lanka & current Leader of the Opposition
- David de Kretser, AC, KStJ - former Governor of Victoria
- Anura Bandaranaike - former Cabinet Minister of Foreign Affairs, tourism, Industry, Investment & National Heritage, Speaker, Leader of the Opposition & Member of Parliament
- Dinesh Gunawardena, MP - current Cabinet Minister of Urban Development, Sacred Area Development & Member of Parliament
- Anil Moonesinghe - former Cabinet Minister of Communications, Deputy Speaker and Chairman, Ceylon Transport Board.
- Susil Moonesinghe - former Chief Minister of the Western Province
- C.V. Gunaratne - former Cabinet Minister of Industrial Development & Member of Parliament
- Dav Whatmore - former Australian cricketer & Sri Lankan, Bangladesh team coach
References
External links
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