Wuxi Furen High School

Wuxi Furen High School (Chinese: 无锡辅仁中学)
Location
Jiangsu Wuxi Yinxiu road (Chinese: 江苏省无锡市隐秀路)
Information
Type Private high school
Motto "Realizing Ethics, Enhancing Virtue" (Chinese: 明道进德)
Established 1918 by Episcopal Church in the United States of America
School district Jiangsu, Wuxi
Principal Chenxi (Chinese: 陈曦)
Grades 6
Enrollment 5,000
Website http://www.wxfr.net

Wuxi Furen High School was founded in the fall of 1918. The original name was "Wuxi Private Furen Middle School", the preparatory school of Saint John's University in Shanghai. The name Furen (lit. "Helping Charity") is from The Analects of ConfuciusYanyuan :- "meeting friends with articles, helping charity with friends" (Chinese: 以文会友,以友辅仁). The motto is "Realizing Ethics, Enhancing Virtue".[1]

The original location was the east gate of Wuxi old city. Now the school has moved to Yinxiu road, Lihu new district, west of Wuxi.

History

Founding

On 31 July 1918, the Shanghai Saint John's University Wuxi alumni association member Tang Jiyun and Yang Sijian suggested to set up a private preparatory school for the uni. The association was able to collect 4,000 silver dollar to set it up. It opened on 14 September 1918. The first principal is American missionary Mu Gaowen(Chinese: 慕高文) from Episcopal Church in the United States of America.[2] At first the school rented JP Liu's house in Lane Shuyuan. After more students entered the school, in 1924 school built 50 rooms house near Jiangjun bridge, Sujia lane, the east part of Wuxi city. The school was considered the most advanced middle school in the region with modern physics and chemistry laboratories and amphitheaters.[3]

Shanghai campus

During Sino-Japanese War, the school was forced to move to Shanghai Concession and rent part houses of Cishu mansion near Shandong road and Nanjing road. After the war is over, school returned to Wuxi.

Donglin campus

After People's Republic of China was founded, in 1953, school ownership altered from private to public, and changed its name to "Wuxi No.2 Middle School" (abbr. Wuxi 2nd School). Then some elite teachers were subtracted from the school and were ordered to found the Wuxi No.1 High School near the Grand Canal of Wuxi. In January 1971 the No.2 Middle School combined "Donglin primary school" and changed name to "Donglin School". It is not until 1982 did they split again. In 1982 the middle school was confirmed as one of the key provincial middle schools.

Qinyuan campus

On 11 March 1992, to expand from original 12 acres campus area, the school moved to Qinyuan area in the southern suburb. New school occupied 65 acres.[3] In 1994 it changed from middle school to high school. In 1998 it passed national key-school acceptance check. In February 2003, Wuxi government approved Wuxi No.2 High School, Wuxi No.2 Experimental Campus, and Wuxi Furen Private Middle School form up one "Furen Education Corp." The Wuxi No.2 Middle School changed back to its old name "Wuxi Furen High School". In 2004 school was selected as first batch of 4-Star high school.[4]

Lihu campus

In 2007 decision was made by education bureau to move the school again, to newly built Lihu new city near the Yinxiu road and Hubin road, the original site of Taide International School. On 16 August 2008 new campus started to build.[5] On 15 July 2009, the senior grades moved to new address in Lihu campus, while the junior grades remain in Qinyuan campus.[6]

Campus

Nowadays the newest campus has 158 acres with building area more than 80,000 square meters. In total of 66 classes and approx. 5,000 teachers and students.[4]

Notable people

Qian Zhongshu、Qian Zhonghan、Tang Xinyuan、Xu Zhihong、Qin Boyi

References

  1. synyan (2007-02-03). 梁溪漫志03:无锡山色映溪光 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  2. 7月31日 (in Chinese). 2006-07-05. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  3. 1 2 辅仁:从东林书院到蠡湖之滨——无锡市辅仁中学的两次新建 (in Chinese). 2008-11-06. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  4. 1 2 辅仁报第二十期 (in Chinese). 2007-05-28. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
  5. 无锡市辅仁高中隆重举行新校区奠基仪式 (in Chinese). 2008-08-18. Retrieved 2009-07-20.
  6. 无锡市辅仁高中正式乔迁新校区 (in Chinese). 2009-07-16. Retrieved 2009-07-20.

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