1952

Chum Creek Rebuild 1952Outdoor education began at Chum Creek. Wesley alumni with skills in architecture, engineering and many trades, as well as  teaching staff and students, especially boarders, rallied to support the outdoor education program at Chum Creek, beginning with the building of the original mess hut in 1952.


1957

Dr Tom Coates OBEDr Tom Coates OBE, the 12th Headmaster of Wesley College, served from 1957 to 1971.


1966

Syndal Campus openingThe Glen Waverley Campus, originally called Syndal Junior School, opened.

Low, horizontal, modern: the Glen Waverley Campus opened in 1966 as Wesley's Syndal Junior School. The former orchard awaits new tree planting.

The First Hundred Years

Wesley College – The First Hundred Years publicationThe third history of the school, Wesley College – The First Hundred Years by OWs Geoffrey Blainey, James Morrissey and SEK Hulme, was published in 1966.

Lion magazine coverThe first 100 years of Wesley was celebrated at the Founders’ Day Dinner.


1972

David Prest AMDavid Prest AM, the 13th Headmaster (the title later changed to Principal), served from 1972 to 1991.

Prest transformed Wesley College in many ways, but his greatest legacy was the introduction of coeducation. He also oversaw an incredible expansion of the College including the incorporation of Cato College as the Elsternwick Campus.


1975

Cadets Wesley College 1975The last group of officers of the Cadet Corps was photographed in 1975.

Established in 1867, the Cadet Corps was disbanded in 1975 following changes in government policy and waning interest.


1978

A coeducation classCoeducation was introduced, starting with students in the Beginners to Year 3 classes. Coeducation had been temporarily introduced in 1917 when South Melbourne College was incorporated into Wesley, with a dozen girls added to the roll, prior to the permanent introduction of coeducation in 1978.

Wesley College Foundation

The Wesley College Foundation was established.

Since its establishment in 1866, Wesley College has relied on the generosity of its donors and benefactors – alumni, parents, past parents and community friends – to enhance its facilities, develop its academic programs, fund the rich diversity of cocurricular and sporting activities, and increase the number of scholarships on offer.


1980

Boarders at Wesley College

The boarding house at Wesley College closed.


1981

Students in the Wesley College Society for the ArtsThe Wesley College Society for the Arts was launched to promote the arts.

Since 1981, thousands of students have benefitted from the activities of the Wesley College Society for the Arts. The society has presented a wide variety of events including artists-in-residence ranging from jazz legend Bob Sedergreen to Professor Charles Castleman (with his Stradivarius), photo journalists, playwrights, painters and sculptors.


1986

Camp MallanaFormal acquisition of Camp Mallana on the Gippsland Lakes provided another outdoor education facility.


1988

Adamson Theatre Company posterThe Adamson Theatre Company at the St Kilda Road Campus, honouring the great tradition of performing arts at Wesley, was officially named. Richard of Bordeaux was one of the Company’s early productions.


1989

Elsternwick Campus launch Wesley CollegeThe Elsternwick Campus of Wesley College was formally established when Cato College, formerly the Elsternwick Campus of Methodist Ladies’ College, merged with Wesley College at the end of 1988.

St Kilda Road Campus fire

Wesley College fire 1989

Fire destroyed much at the St Kilda Road Campus, including irreplaceable archival material.


1990

The first coeducation classThe first coeducation class, the Beginners of 1978, graduated as Year 12s in 1990.


1992

Glen McArthurD Glen McArthur, the 14th Principal of Wesley College, served from 1992 to 1996.

McArthur was a great supporter of arts and the development of Elsternwick.


1993

Special Interest Music Centre, ElsternwickThe Special Interest Music Centre, later renamed the McArthur Music School, opened at Elsternwick.


1994

International Baccalaureate Diploma ProgrammeThe International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme was introduced.

Pictured: teacher Anna Simonsen instructs student Tanya Wilkinson in Mandarin.