Mary Gibson

New Zealand teacher and school principal
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroNew Zealand teacher and school principal
PlacesNew Zealand
wasTeacher Educator
Work fieldAcademia
Gender
Female
Birth28 October 1864, Lyttelton, Christchurch City, Canterbury Region, New Zealand
Death1 September 1929Oamaru, Waitaki District, Canterbury Region, New Zealand (aged 64 years)
Star signScorpio
Education
University of Canterbury
The details

Biography

Mary Victoria Gibson (28 October 1864 – 1 September 1929) was a New Zealand teacher and school principal.

Born in Lyttelton in 1864 soon after her mother came to New Zealand, her father was Frederick Denhame Gibson, a port officer in Lyttelton, and her mother was Mary Fox Gibson (née Rodd). Mary Gibson received her education at a private school, followed by Christchurch Girls' High School and Canterbury College, from where she graduated in 1887 with a Bachelor of Arts, and a year later with a Master of Arts in English and Latin.

Gibson started teaching at Sydenham School while she was still at the college. In 1889, Gibson was put in charge of the girls' department of East Christchurch School. She was appointed principal of Christchurch Girls' High School in 1898 after the sudden death of the previous principal, Emily Foster. She remained at the school for 30 years and under her guidance, the roll grew significantly. She retired from CGHS in 1928 and in the following year, she relieved the principal at Waitaki Girls' High School in Oamaru. She developed pneumonia and died in Oamaru on 1 September 1929. Her funeral service was held at Rangi Ruru and she was buried at Waimairi Cemetery. Later in the month, a memorial service was held at ChristChurch Cathedral.

Gibson was from a family of educators. Her father bought a school in Papanui in 1889, and it was run by her sister Helen and her mother; the school was later renamed Rangi Ruru. Her sister Beatrice became principal of Nelson College for Girls.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 29 Oct 2021. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.