Brisbane Girls Grammar School

Brisbane Girls Grammar School is an independent non-denominational secondary day school for girls, located in Spring Hill, an inner suburb of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Founded in 1875, the school is one of eight grammar schools in Queensland that were established under the Grammar Schools Act of 1860. The school originally opened as a branch of the Brisbane Grammar School with fifty students under the direction of a principal, Janet O'Connor.

Brisbane Girls Grammar School is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA), the International Coalition of Girls' Schools, and is a member of the Queensland Girls' Secondary Schools Sports Association (QGSSSA).

Brisbane Girls Grammar School has approximately 1,550 students enrolled in Years 7 to 12. Its brother school is Brisbane Grammar School. The School will open its Junior School in 2026, taking in students in Years 5 and 6.

History
Brisbane Girls Grammar School was founded in March 1875, six years before women were admitted to universities in Sydney and Melbourne. The school opened as a branch of Brisbane Grammar School with fifty female students under the direction of a lady principal, Janet O'Connor, in premises on George Street, Brisbane. Within six months the school outgrew these premises and subsequently moved to a site on Wickham Terrace. By July 1882, the school was well established and a decision was made to separate from Brisbane Grammar School, so as to operate independently under the Grammar Schools Act. Plans were also made to move the school to its present location on Gregory Terrace, Spring Hill. In 1884, the Main Building, designed by architect Richard Gailey, was opened to one hundred students.

The school's motto is Nil Sine Labore, Latin for "Nothing Without Labour". It was adopted from the Brisbane Grammar School, which in turn borrowed it from Horace's Second Book of Satires. The school badge is an open book on a shield with the school motto on a ribbon underneath. The open book was also borrowed from Oxford University, where over half of the original staff of Brisbane Grammar School were originally secured.The School colour is royal blue, adopted from the colours of Brisbane Grammar School, which were originally derived as a compromise between the Oxford colour of light blue and the Cambridge colour of dark blue.

In 2007, the $25 million, six-level Cherrell Hirst Creative Learning Centre opened, winning several awards including the prestigious Sir Zelman Cowen Award for public architecture in 2008. In 2009 a new 25 m suspended swimming pool and multi-purpose covered area were completed. The Gehrmann Building, constructed in 1986, was renovated in 2011.

In 2015, the five-storey, $17.4 million Elizabeth Jameson Research Learning Centre opened, to coincide with the introduction of Year 7 to the school. Home to a collection of more than 55,000 resources, the Research Learning Centre provides numerous flexible contemporary learning spaces as well as space for individual study.

Co-curriculum
Brisbane Girls Grammar offers 18 competitive and non-competitive sports. The School is a founding member of the Queensland Girls’ Secondary Schools Sporting Association (QGSSSA) competition, and participates in a range of Brisbane Club associations as well as operating a comprehensive Interhouse programme.

QGSSSA: Australian rules football, artistic gymnastics, athletics, badminton, basketball, cricket, cross country, football, hockey, netball, rhythmic gymnastics, softball (retired 2024), swimming, tennis, touch and volleyball. Club: Fencing (QFA), Rowing (BRSA) and water polo (BWPI) Lifestyle: Yoga, pilates and rock climbing.

The three core music domains (strings, band and choir) offer more than 900 places for students to pursue their musical talents at their specific level of proficiency. Specialist music staff provide instrumental and vocal tuition in group and private lessons.

In addition, the School offers a range of clubs and activities including debating, calligraphy, design club, and a music studio.

House system
As with most Australian schools, Brisbane Girls Grammar School uses a house system. The house system provides a framework of support for students during their years at the school. The house system originated in 1964, with 10 houses that were amalgamated to five in 1966. In 1973 the house system reverted to Interform Competitions but was reintroduced in 1980. Since then, some of the previously discontinued houses have returned, while new houses have been created. There are currently nine houses, each named after past principals and teachers of the school as well as previous chairmen of the board of trustees:

Campuses and facilities
In addition to the main school site at Gregory Terrace, Spring Hill, the school has a Sports Campus, Rangakarra, in the Brisbane suburb of Fig Tree Pocket and an outdoor education campus, Marrapatta, in the Mary Valley.

Brisbane Campus, Gregory Terrace, Spring Hill

Since 1884, Brisbane Girls Grammar has continually developed their main campus. Recent building projects include the Science Learning Centre, opened in October 2020 by His Excellency, the Honourable Paul de Jersey AC. The building’s seven storeys offer dedicated floors and specialised equipment for each scientific discipline (Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Junior Science). In 2015, to coincide with the introduction of Year 7, the school developed the Elizabeth Jameson Research Learning Centre. The Cherrel Hirst Creative Learning Centre, opened in 2007, houses music, drama, computer technology and art facilities. Additional Main Campus facilities include a 25-metre suspended swimming pool, the Gehrmann Theatre and the McCrae Grassie Sports Centre.

Marrapatta Memorial Outdoor Education Centre

The school operates a dedicated Outdoor education Centre in the Mary Valley at Imbil, approximately 2 hours drive north of Brisbane.

Rangakarra Recreational and Environmental Education Centre

In 2013, Brisbane Girls Grammar School acquired a 13-hectare site in Fig Tree Pocket, which comprises two playing fields and three ovals. It is 12 km from the CBD and is the home ground for sports such as hockey, cricket and touch. The campus is also used to teach environmental sciences, with school groups working with local organisations to rehabilitate areas of ecological significance. The site was officially named Rangakarra Recreational and Environmental Education Centre on 23 May 2015 and the Main Field was renamed the Daphne Welch (1949) Oval in honour of past student and athlete Daphne Pirie (Welch) MBE, AO. The second oval is called the Pauline Harvey-Short Oval, named after dedicated alumnae and staff member, Pauline Harvey-Short (Harvey, 1971).

Notable alumnae

 * Minna AthertonAustralian competitive swimmer and 100m backstroke world record holder
 * Betty Churcher artist and former director of the Australian National Gallery (attended Somerville House from age 7–15)
 * Shelley Crafttelevision presenter
 * Rhoda Felgate – speech and drama teacher and founder of Brisbane's Twelfth Night Theatre.
 * Professor Adele Green Queenslander of the Year 2013, epidemiologist, Queensland Institute of Medical Research.
 * Air Vice Marshal Julie Hammer engineer
 * Gwen Harwood poet
 * Professor Dorothy Hill geologist
 * May Darlington Laheylawyer and judge


 * Margaret McMurdo president and judge of Queensland Court of Appeal
 * Margy Osmondbusinesswoman


 * Professor Cheryl Praeger mathematician
 * Judith Rodriguez (née Green)poet
 * Myf Shepherdinternational model
 * Lenore Tayloreditor of The Guardian Australia
 * Edith Alice Waterworth OBEwelfare worker, columnist and women's rights activist
 * Grace Wilson - high-ranked nurse in the Australian Army during World War I and the first years of World War II