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Southland Boys

Southland Boys

Non Scholae Sed Vitae Discimus

Est. 1881

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About Southland Boys

Southland Boys’ High School is one of the oldest boys schools in New Zealand, founded in 1881 and long associated with the character and sporting culture of Invercargill. The school has remained on its Herbert Street site since 1926, when the main brick building, later named the Pearce Block, was opened. Over the decades, additional buildings were added and named for long-serving rectors and staff, creating a campus shaped by generations of leadership. A major fire in 1980 caused significant damage to part of the Pearce Block, an event that became part of the school’s modern folklore and was documented in that year’s Southlandian magazine.

SBHS has always had a strong presence within Southland life, particularly through sport. The school’s rugby tradition is one of the deepest in the country. It has produced All Blacks across multiple eras, including Mils Muliaina, Paul Henderson, Jamie Mackintosh, Clarke Dermody and Brian McKechnie, the latter being the only New Zealander capped in both rugby and cricket at international level. The First XV’s national championship win in 2023, which also secured the Moascar Cup, was one of the landmark achievements in the school’s history. The result sparked celebrations throughout the city, with tributes from former players, community leaders and Invercargill’s sister city in Japan.

Beyond rugby, the school remains active in cricket, rowing, athletics and a long list of traditional Southland sports. SBHS previously co-hosted the national State Twenty20 Cricket Knock-Out Tournament in 2006 and continues to contribute players to provincial and national age-group systems.

The academic and cultural side of the school sits alongside its sporting identity. Notable past students include legal and political philosopher Jeremy Waldron, actor George Mason and cartoonist Shaun Yeo, who began contributing illustrations to the Southland Times while still enrolled. The school’s heritage of framed First XV photographs and honours boards remains an important link to past generations.

The house system reflects the school’s history. Pearce, Uttley, Leadbetter and Grant houses are each named for past rectors, while Coldstream is the one exception. House competitions span sport, culture, fundraising and inter-school events, building much of the internal structure of school life.

The list of rectors stretches back to the nineteenth century and charts the evolution of the school through periods of expansion, post-war rebuilding and modernisation. Leadership has remained an important part of how SBHS defines itself, with continuity visible in the naming of buildings, houses and awards.