The acronym E.G.C. used to stand for English Girls College.
Before you start laughing and say what are boys doing in a girls' school, let me tell you some history.
History of E.G.C.
The English Girls College opened in October 1935. One of the people involved was Sir Henry Edward Barker (1872 - 1942), an English businessman whose ancestors settled in Alexandria decades ago, and was very prosperous. The archives of the Barker family, linked above, may contain a lot of historical information about the E.G.C. He was also involved in managing several projects that still exist in today's Egypt, including the Alexandria Water Company, National Bank of Egypt, Egyptian Cotton Exchange, and many others.
The original set of buildings were designed by the English architect Grey Warnum, and were inspired by the Spanish American Style of Architecture. Designed to hold a maximum of 1000 pupils, on an area of 20 feddans donated by the Alexandria governorate. They included a sports fields, a large Gymnasium, a full size swimming pool with changing rooms attached, Science laboratories for Physics, Chemistry and Biology, an Art room, a Domestic Science department and needle work section, an elegant dining room, a fine library and a great assembly hall fitted with a stage. The residence of the head mistress is a villa attached to the complex.
The Free Officers revolution of 1952 deposed the king, and established a military junta as rulers of Egypt. In 1956, they sacked the British staff, and the school became a state school, and renamed El Nasr Girl's College. It admitted some 4,000 students that year. The same fate was to become the other two English schools in Alexandria as well, namely, Victoria College (VC), and English Boys School (EBS).
In 1957, the exiled governors of the three English schools of Alexandria started work on compensation claims. Although some compensation was received from Egyptian funds held in London, there was clearly no hope of regaining possession of the three school properties in Alexandria. Various school Trusts were therefore set up as charities to use the income to promote and maintain the teaching of the English language and culture in the Middle East, especially in Alexandria. In 1972, the Victoria College and English Girls School Trusts amalgamated into the Alexandria Schools Trust, and were joined in 1980 by the British Boys School Trust.
E.G.C. started out as a Girls only school, from Nursery (kindergarten) all the way to high school. It had a boarding section that was still in operation in the 1970s, where the daughters of diplomats and other busy people enrolled.
More info available at the E.G.C. web site History page.
After the British Era
The school went by various names, from the original English Girls' College, to El Nasr Girls' College in 1956, to El Nasr Chatby College (E.C.C) when it started admitting boys. "El Nasr" means "Victory" in Arabic, as was common to rename things in that post-revolution era. The name Chatby is the English rendering of the district that the school is in, and is named for a person الشاطبي who is buried there, originally from Jativa شاطبة in Muslim Spain (Andalus). Our uniforms had E.C.C. embroidered on them.
The school had some British staff well into the 1970s, with Mrs. Anne Khalafalla آن خلف الله the last native British headmistress to run the school. The head of primary section was (Mrs. Atteya عطية), another British lady married to an Egyptian. Everyone admired, respected and feared both of them. After her retirement, Mrs. Enaam El Dafrawi إنعام الدفراوي, an Egyptian, replaced her as a headmistress.
Even in those days, there were a few students who struggled with English, had bad pronounciation and comprehension, ...etc., but that was the exception, not the norm.
The E.G.C. Boys: Boys in a Girls' School
I do not know the exact date they started admitting boy. My eldest cousin started there around 1964, and he tells me that his class was not the first one to have boys. In any case, boys were only allowed till grade 3 Prep (equivalent to grade 9 in North America).
By the early 1990s, the school stopped taking in boys again, and became a purely girls' school once more.
The nasty brats from the nearby E.B.S or English Boys School (just down the road to the south), and the faraway V.C. or Victoria College would still make fun of us that we are in a Girls school, calling us sissies and such. The reputation was that the EBS and VC boys were really into bad things, from name calling, bad manners, to much worse. The EGC boys were much better mannered for sure.
Current State of Affairs
The teaching standards in E.G.C. declined drastically, and the quality of recent graduates is in question. A visitor who used to be a prefect in the early 1990s tells me that she used to take girls out of the line in the morning if they are wearing jewellery. A recent visit there there found that most girls wear make up, eye liner, long nails with nail polish and jewellery. Things that were unthinkable even in the early 1990s, and indicate a lack of discipline.
Weak management and an influx of young inexperienced teachers, along with the fact that the school is now government run contribute to this decline. So now, it is a school with English heritage, and nothing more.
E.G.C. Web site
Amirah, a visitor to my web site, kindly pointed out that EGC now has a web site at egcalex.com.
Satellite Photo of E.G.C
Here is a satellite photo of the E.G.C. in Alexandria, from Google Local web site.
Comments
rowan (not verified)
elnasr school was a bad
Sun, 2010/05/09 - 14:35elnasr school was a bad school i'm in american school and egc was the uglest school in the world
mrs (not verified)
you can't even spell your
Fri, 2010/07/09 - 20:28you can't even spell your words correctly
how could you comment if you can't write properly?
mrs (not verified)
totally untrue
Fri, 2010/07/09 - 20:25despite the fact that most of what you said is sts. true yet still it's the EGC it's a matter of different social standards and SOME unfaithful /greedy figures
dina aly mohamed (not verified)
I Love E.G.C. , its the best
Tue, 2010/09/28 - 16:47I Love E.G.C. , its the best school ever :) I LoVe My ScHooL :)
Anonymous (not verified)
Most of the British schools
Tue, 2010/10/05 - 16:10Most of the British schools that were built in Alexandria during the colonial period were mainly designed as typical copies of some famous public schools in Britain, namely Eton college. However, the post colonial era and the regime that always accompanies any national movement have stripped these schools of their identities, especially during the late 1990's -a period that was witnessing an invasion of bad taste and new money in many parts of Egypt. I was graduated from the EBS many years ago, and we, as students, were very proud of the legacy of our school, which was one of the best schools in Alexandria till almost the first half of 1980s. However, I moved to London since, and when I was back to Alexandria, which was like two years ago, I went to visit my school, only to find that I was visiting ruins of the past, and I failed to recognize many places that have been modified to classrooms, in order to take more numbers of students, who are unfortunately ill mannered and not up to the standardss of their peers who finished their education in the same school some years ago, let alone their poor command of English. I am so sad to find the status of these schools, with all their history and heritage, are diminshing in the education market in comparison to the new so-called international language schools, as the ALS or El Ryada...etc, I hope that some trusts can reown these schools and restore the damage caused to them through the frenzic and notorious process of nationalisation. Though the process has taken years to strip these schools of their glory, I can see the rapid decline that happens now in many of these great schools...Alas!
Anonymous (not verified)
totally the opposite mr or
Fri, 2010/10/08 - 18:36totally the opposite mr or miss these school you refer to are all built upon the shoulders on EGC teachers and the schools aren't declining they are regaining their strength these are productive schools and will never lose this privilidge whatever happens
A LOYAL EGC GRADUATE AND A LOVING EGC TEACHER.
Anonymous (not verified)
Most of the British schools
Mon, 2012/04/23 - 18:38Contrary to what the previous person has said I would like to point out that the Architect of the EGC certainly did not copy any architectural *design* existing already in public schools in Britain; instead he created a building that would fit in with the climate and be sympathetic to centuries of the culture and styles of the North African region. However, the *governance* and teaching methods within the school may well have followed the British Public School tradition, up until the advent of the Egyptian political changes that started in the mid 1950s.
By the way the Architect's name was George Grey WORNUM (that is the correct spelling). You can read more about him on Wikipedia.
lama (not verified)
im gonna enter this skool , so please tell me some stuff :/
Wed, 2011/07/13 - 09:39hey , i came from syria , i was living there , and now , in alexandria , and my father told me tat he is going to register me and my 2 little sisters in this skool , so can u plz tel me some stuff about it , like .. are there any activities? with some examples please , and can i study social studies, geography ad history in english if i dont know arabic? plz , i want some answers , cuz im in a very bad mood , travelling from a country to other and mising my friends , so plz cheer me up to be excited enough for entering this skool :) ,,, and thank you
Anonymous (not verified)
my school is the best school
Thu, 2012/05/17 - 15:05my school is the best school , and im sure we will make it more better
alla massouh (not verified)
i have a nice pic 4 you
Thu, 2013/07/18 - 18:55i have a nice pic 4 you
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