Shirley Boys’ High School is a long-established state secondary school for boys in Christchurch, serving the eastern and northern suburbs since its founding in 1957. The school emerged from a community push for single-sex education for boys in a rapidly growing part of the city. Its first headmaster, Charles Gallagher, led the school from a modest, swampy site on North Parade where classes initially operated in newly built blocks surrounded by paddocks. Despite these humble beginnings, Shirley quickly built a strong local identity and positioned itself as a proud rival to the city’s older institutions, including Christchurch Boys’ High School, St Andrew’s College and St Bede’s College.
From the outset, Shirley’s character has been shaped by a combination of community expectations, physical resilience, and a strong sense of brotherhood. The school motto, Interest Omnium Recte Facere (“In everyone’s interests to act rightly”), underpins its cultural emphasis on conduct, responsibility and integrity. As Christchurch expanded, the school grew in size and ambition, developing a reputation for straightforward, hard-working values and a broad academic and sporting programme. By its 50th Jubilee in 2007, Shirley Boys’ had become one of the most recognisable boys’ schools in the region, supported by an active Old Boys’ network and deep inter-school rivalries.
The defining chapter of the school’s modern history came after the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, when the campus suffered extensive structural damage. Several blocks and hard-surface areas were rendered unusable, forcing a temporary relocation to Papanui High School. In an extraordinary arrangement, the two schools shared facilities on a split timetable—Papanui in the morning, Shirley in the afternoon and evening—until the damaged campus could partially reopen six months later. The longer-term solution arrived in 2013, when the government confirmed that Shirley Boys’ would move to a new purpose-built site alongside Avonside Girls’ High School on the former QEII Park grounds. The relocation was completed in 2019, giving the school a modern campus designed to meet contemporary educational needs while retaining its traditions and identity.
Shirley’s academic profile reflects the diversity of its enrolment, with students drawn from a wide socio-economic and cultural range across Christchurch’s eastern suburbs. The school maintains an Equity Index around the national mid-range and offers strong academic support for both high achievers and learners requiring additional guidance. Māori students form a significant proportion of the roll, and the school’s Māori name, Ngā Tama o Ōruapaeroa, acknowledges its connection to the region’s local history and iwi relationships. House culture remains an important part of student life, with the four houses—Aoraki, Mullins, Snell and Blake—driving inter-house competitions and leadership opportunities.
Sport is central to Shirley Boys’ identity and a major source of its reputation. Rugby has long been the school’s most visible code, producing All Blacks such as Chris Jack, Craig Green, Ryan Crotty, Steve Scott, and more recently Tom Christie and Brodie McAlister. The school maintains competitive rugby rivalries across Christchurch and the wider South Island. Cricket has also been a strength, with Old Boys including Nathan Astle, Craig McMillan and Richard Petrie, while hockey has produced national representatives such as Bradley Shaw and Hayden Shaw. The school’s sporting breadth extends into rowing, athletics, water polo and league, with Jamayne Isaako among its professional rugby league alumni. These achievements have helped cement Shirley as a major contributor to New Zealand sporting pathways over several decades.
Shirley’s Old Boys’ community remains active, with past pupils contributing across literature, science, politics, sport and the performing arts. Notable alumni include novelist and historian Stevan Eldred-Grigg, former Member of Parliament Aaron Gilmore, computer scientist Dave Jaggar, and arts contributor Eden Mulholland. The Jubilee celebrations in 2007 highlighted the strength of these intergenerational connections, reflecting a school culture that values loyalty, service and tradition.
With its history shaped by community vision, natural disaster, reinvention and longstanding inter-school rivalries, Shirley Boys’ High School continues to occupy a distinctive place within Christchurch education. Its move to the modern QEII Park campus has ensured the school retains its heritage while preparing its students—academically, culturally and athletically—for contemporary New Zealand life.

