The Roar - Issue 7 Term 1 2026

Contents

Head of College - Mr Richard Ford

Hundreds of students from across the Central West have descended on the College this week to compete in the da Vinci Decathlon. On Wednesday, the College’s Year 10 team came out on top. We look forward to hearing how other year groups go today and tomorrow, and thank the staff and past students who have helped to make this opportunity available to students once again.

Just recently, two of our students have made significant achievements of a literary nature. Bridget White (Year 8) had her novella long-listed for a prestigious national competition that’s open to students up to 19 years old. Bridget, who wrote the story when she was 13 years old, has made the most of the support available from Mr Stagg’s Creative Writing Club, and we congratulate her on this accomplishment. In addition, we were excited to hear this week that Senaya Lankathilaka has published her first book. The book was written by Senaya when she was in Year 1, and we look forward to putting a copy of the book on display in the Junior School library so that all students can see what Senaya has achieved.

On Friday Night at 6:15 pm, I encourage you to come along and cheer on the Year 7/8 Boys A Basketball team in their Grand Final game. Alternatively, Under 14 and Under 16 Cricket teams will both be playing at Alan Morse Park on Saturday morning, and I know they would appreciate your support. We also congratulate Emily Tallentire on being selected to play in the NSW Blues Under 18 Girls Hockey team.

Mr Richard Ford
Head of College

Senior School

It’s been an incredibly packed Term 1 calendar. As it draws to a close, I am almost in shock at the number of events, initiatives, activities and excursions that have occurred. More important than that is the everyday learning that has happened in classrooms. I congratulate all our students on the ways they have contributed to the life of the College over this term.  

The standard you walk past… 

Recently, we have been speaking in assemblies and other forums about standards. Some years ago, Chief of the Army, Lieutenant-General David Morrison, gave an address in response to allegations of misconduct within the military. In that address, he shares a critical line, “the standard you walk past is the standard you accept”. The idea is that culture is built on the behaviour, values and norms that form part of everyday accepted practice. The notion is that to ‘walk past’ or ignore a behaviour or practice that falls below our standards is, in reality, to accept that behaviour as the new standard.

It so easily applies to school life. To walk past litter in the playground is to accept that it has a place there. To walk past and ignore unkindness is to accept it. For staff to ignore disruptions in the classroom is to accept them as tolerable. As we seek to build and grow a culture founded on our values of Respect, Compassion, Truth and Hope, I continue to encourage students to take on board David Morrison’s motto. A community in which all members aspire to these values is a community in which we will see young people (and staff) thrive.  

As we seek to work hard as a community to get the ‘little things’ right,  such as uniform, I hope that these things gradually get easier. I also hope that students, parents and staff alike are able to see these standards for what they are: ways in which we create an environment in which students feel safe and valued.

On the note of uniform, please remember to check your child’s winter uniform in the next few weeks and make plans for any required items. Students have a tendency to grow significantly over two terms, so take my advice and check those trousers still fit before day one of Term 2.  

Driving around the College 

Please remember to adhere to the speed and parking guidelines at the College for the safety of others. It is worth noting that speed limits on the College grounds are 15 km/h and that student pickups are only to occur in the pickup and drop-off areas during bus times.  

Congratulations 

Congratulations to Bridget White in Year 8, whose novella The Sound of Light has been shortlisted for the 2026 Somerset Storyfest National Novella Writing Competition. This is an extraordinary achievement given her age, as the competition is open to school students of all ages.  

Congratulations also to Emily Tallentire, who has been selected to represent NSW Under 18s Blues. We are sure that she will represent Bathurst and the College with great distinction and acknowledge this selection as a result of hard work over many years.  

Mr Daniel Odell
Acting Head of Senior School

Junior School

da Vinci Decathlon

Today, Thursday 19 March, some of our Year 5 and 6 students are competing in the Central West Division of the da Vinci Decathlon, which will be held on the Senior School Campus. Schools from all over the Central West compete in this test of general knowledge and problem-solving across a wide range of disciplines. I wish the students well in their endeavours.

Picnic On The Oval

We welcome all Prep and Junior School families to join us for the Picnic on the Oval on Friday 27 March from 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm. This event will provide an opportunity for parents to meet the parents of other children in their child’s class. Please bring a packed picnic dinner. No alcoholic drinks allowed please.

Parent Teacher Interviews

Parents are invited to meet with their child’s class teacher in Week 8 for Prep and Week 9 for Junior School for their Semester 1 Parent-Teacher Interviews. These interviews are an important part of our Assessment and Reporting Schedule for the year, and we value the opportunity to work together with parents to ensure our students are striving towards their potential. Information will be sent via email about how to sign up for an interview in the next week.

Easter Service and Easter Hat Parade

On Thursday 2 April, all Prep and Junior School students will have an Easter Service at 2:00 pm. Parents are most welcome to attend. Following the service, the Prep and Infants students will be having their annual Easter Hat Parade. I strongly encourage parents to come and watch. After the Hat Parade, Infants students will be able to depart for the school holidays with their parents.

Road Safety on the Junior School Campus

The safety and wellbeing of our Junior School students is of paramount importance to us. There are two pedestrian crossings at the front of the school, and I ask that parents also use these and lead by example.

Recently, I have witnessed too many cars exceeding our Campus speed limit of 15km/h, and I please ask everyone who drives on our campus to adhere to this speed limit. Could I also ask that you be patient whilst driving on Campus and wait for pedestrians to fully exit the pedestrian crossings before you drive through the crossing. Safety on the roads on our Campus grounds is everyone’s responsibility.

Drop Off and Pick Up

Please note that students should be dropped off and picked up at the front of the Junior School. The only exception is for students who are attending early music practice. These students may be dropped off at the back of the school.

I also encourage parents to park in the carpark and not on any of the lawn areas.

Mr Chris Jackman
Head of Junior School

Prep School

Prep Wattle

Prep Wattle have had fun settling into classroom routines, making friends and learning new things.

Some highlights this term have included exploring the life cycle of a sunflower, making different shapes each week with found objects, our Teddy Bear’s Picnic and going to special Assemblies with the Junior School.

Mrs Fabris and I are very pleased with how our students are learning new skills and adapting to the changes in school life.

We look forward to lots more fun and learning during the year.

Mrs Chelsea Chapman

Sports

Sports Draw

Grand Finals

This week, we have Grand Finals for our 7/8A Basketball team, along with our Under 14 and Under 16 Cricket teams. It would be fantastic to see as many students and parents as possible coming along to support and cheer on our teams.

We wish all teams the very best of luck!

Swimming

On Tuesday, Scots All Saints College sent a strong squad to the ISA Swimming Carnival at Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre. It was a successful carnival for our swimmers, with several competitors taking part in numerous events throughout the day. The ISA Swim Team will be announced next week.

Last week, at the HICES Swimming Carnival, the College achieved an outstanding result, finishing 4th overall and 2nd in aggregate points – a fantastic effort by all involved.

Special congratulations to the following students who placed in the top three in their respective age groups:

  • Chloe Roughley – 9 Years Girls (2nd)
  • Audrey Middleton – 9 Years Girls (3rd)
  • Peggy Hunter – 10 Years Girls (3rd)
  • Oscar Middleton – 10 Years Boys (3rd)
  • Leila Fisk – 12 Years Girls (2nd)

The following Scots All Saints swimmers will represent HICES at the CIS Carnival:

  • Isla Fisk
  • Leila Fisk
  • Peggy Hunter
  • Audrey Middleton
  • Oscar Middleton
  • Chloe Roughley

Well done to all participants, and best of luck to our HICES swimmers at the upcoming CIS Carnival.

Representative News

Congratulations to Emily Tallentire on her selection in the NSW Blues Under 18 Girls Hockey team. Selection in the Under 18 Blues squad recognises outstanding performances throughout the representative pathway and provides an opportunity to compete at the highest level of junior hockey in Australia.

Emily will compete at the 2026 Under 18 National Championships, to be held in Darwin, Northern Territory, from 3–11 July 2026. Well done, Emily!

Mr Beau McClintock
Director of Sport and Activities

Book Buzz

This week in the library, we celebrated Harmony Week with a range of beautiful picture books designed to get us thinking and talking about the wonderful multicultural nation that we call home. Kindergarten read ‘Room on Our Rock’ by Kate and Jol Temple and discussed just how special it is to be able to share what we have. Year 1 read ‘Stay for Dinner’ by Sandhya Parapuppukkaran and Michelle Pereira, and we shared with one another the special meals in our families. Year 2 enjoyed ‘My Two Blankets’ written by Irena Kobold and illustrated by Freya Blackwood. We talked about the ways we can all make new people feel welcome.

Remember, the Premier’s Reading Challenge continues! See Mrs Mackay for guidance on how to log your reading. She will also point you in the direction of some great reads, which are part of the challenge.

Over on the senior campus, we are gearing up to celebrate Easter with some new holiday reads appearing on our shelves just in time for the break. There will also be lucky borrower prizes for keen borrowers over the next three weeks, so hop on down to the library and get reading for your chance to win.

The Roar Recommends

Junior Campus

Younger Readers

Older Readers                                             

Senior Campus

Junior Readers

Senior Readers

Happy Reading!

Mrs Angela Davis
Head of Library Services

Events & Announcements

From The Archives

The school buildings in the first 45 years

The first classroom for this beginning boys’ school was in the Oddfellows’ Hall in Keppel Street with Mr Henry Kemmis as Headmaster, 27 January 1874. For the next two years, the school classes were held in a succession of premises until the final buildings were completed. One original foundation student, T.B.U. Sloman recalls “the first school was held in Oddfellows’ Hall, Keppel St., Mr Kemmis and his boarders lived in a house next to the Bank of New South Wales in Russell St. Then school was held in a small room in the Market Tower, then in Mr Kemmis’ house, then in a cottage at the S.E. corner of the old ASC paddock”.

The new premises were located on a site originally set apart for a Bishop’s Court, and arrangements were made with the trustees of this site to hand over five acres to the Council of Trustees of All Saints’ College. It is this site where the new buildings – “two wings, each of two stories of strong brickwork” were erected. One wing, on an east-west line, with a southern aspect overlooking the city, contained a fine, large school hall, with the headmaster’s study attached, several classrooms, and above, on the upper storey, ample space for dormitories and adjuncts. The other wing, on a north-south line, with easterly aspect, comprised the headmaster’s residence, and necessary offices and further floor space on the upper storey for dormitories and other accommodation. In front of the building, an approach lined with Pinus Insignia and ornamental trees together, with shrubbery and a flower garden, was laid out. The architect was Mr E.C. Blacket, of Sydney.”

By the middle of 1875, the premises were completed and ready for occupation. The exact date is doubtful, but it was certainly about the middle of 1975 and from that date it assumed the name ‘All Saints’ College’.

In the early months of the school’s existence, situated as it was in temporary premises, opportunity for sport of any kind was somewhat limited, but after the occupation of the new building in 1875, the playground adjoining being sufficiently large for practice, sport began to take its fixed and inseparable part in the school life. On the adjoining hill overlooking the city of Bathurst was another important secondary school, St. Stanislaus’ College, which had been opened in September 1873, just four months before All Saints, and throughout the years, these two institutions have been constant and strenuous competitors in the field of sport.

Over the next four headmasters, the school continued to grow, with new buildings added, and student numbers, both boarding and day students. New classrooms, dormitories and in 1882 premises for a hospital were procured at the top of Russell St. A school chapel was planned, and with the Old Boys of the college raising the funds, plans were drawn up and a foundation stone laid in 1908. By July 1909, the chapel was ready for occupation, but ‘owing to a delay in completing the seating and other parts of the interior furnishings, it was not until late in 1910 that it was dedicated by Bishop Camidge’.

The fifth Headmaster, George Sydney Stiles, assumed control in 1911, when there had been a considerable decrease in school attendance, but he was soon able to correct the downturn and progress was made in numbers and academic achievements. However, with the outbreak of WW1, things were to change.

‘The Great War is an event of crucial importance in the history of All Saints’ College, bringing it great distinction through the achievements of its many Old Boys, but also tragedy, not only in the loss of its many splendid sons, but in the effect of the war crises upon the school itself.’
With many Old Bathurstians, older students and current staff enlisting with the British or Australian forces, financial pressures, and student and staff shortages, it became impossible for the school to continue operating.

On Mr Stiles’ departure, the State Education Department took action to acquire the site and buildings for a High School at Bathurst. The All Saints’ College property was purchased by the Government on 24 October 1919, for two thousand seven hundred and fifty pounds. There were to be some years before the site was properly developed, and it wasn’t occupied until 1926. Skeletons or remains of the old school buildings can still be ‘imagined’ at the present site of Bathurst High School. The Bathurst High Campus now commands a new title, Denison College of Secondary Education, with an enrolment of approximately 1,200 students.

Mrs Memory Sanders
Archives

Past Students Cricket Match

The annual match between the First XI and the Past Students XI was held on the Ides of March on Hector Oval. The Past Students have retained the Wiburd Trophy. They batted first, making a total of All out for 135 runs. After lunch, the First XI were all out for 70.

For the Past Students, Clem Gentle – normally a First XI player but transferred to the Past Students team of the day to make up the numbers- scored 41, and Ben Radford scored 25. Bowling figures were Bruce Webb 3-20, and Clem Gentle, who bowled only one over, taking 2 wickets and a maiden.

For the First XI, Lochie Shoemark was the top scorer with 19 runs, followed by Edward Anderson with 10. Top bowler for the First XI was Albert Telford with 3-22, followed by Jack Reid on 2-27.

The match has now been played almost annually for over a quarter of a century. It was originally organised by Don Wiburd and a group of Scots Old Boys from the 1960s. Because Don had an association with both Scots and All Saints, the tradition has carried over into Scots All Saints, and indeed this year the majority of the team were past students of SASC.

Our thanks go to Greg Radford, who organised the Past Students and captained their team. Thanks are also due to the First XI boys who came in to play on what would normally be a day off form School. Thanks also go to Sports Administrator Beau McClintock, who supervised the arrangements, and Tom Murray, the First XI coach, who oversaw the day.

Mr Andrew Maher
Archives

Calendar

Friday 20 March 
da Vinci Decathlon Years 7/8

Monday 23 March
JS HICES Football Trials
Year 9 Camp

Tuesday 24 March
Prep Parent Teacher Interviews
AICES Hockey Trials
Year 9 Camp

Wednesday 25 March
Prep Parent Teacher Interviews
CIS Swimming
ISA Touch Trials
Year 9 Camp

Thursday 26 March
JS Bogan Billa Culturals
Year 10 Science Challenge
Rugby 7s Secondary Schools
Year 7 Vaccinations
Year 9 Camp

The latest Term Dates can be found on our website HERE

SS: Senior School   JS: Junior School

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