Home-100 years of Grey Lynn School
- Our School Icons The Puriri Tree
- Our School Icons Memorial Plaques
- Our School Icons The Dental Clinic
- Our School Icons The Plantation
- Our School Icons The Swimming Pool
- Our School Icons The Adventure Playgrounds
- Grey Lynn School Pupils at War - 1914-1918
- Grey Lynn School Pupils at War - 1939-1945
- Our School Taonga: Our Motto-Deeds not Words
- Our School Taonga: Certificates and awards
- Our School Taonga: The 1929 Handmade School Magazine
- Our School Taonga: Jubilee Badges
- Our School Taonga: Homework!
- Changes to our school buildings in 100 years
- Famous Past Pupils
- Arbor Day at Grey Lynn School
- Sports in the past
- Grey Lynn School Jubilees
- Centennial 2010
- Memories of Grey Lynn School by past pupils
- Memories of Grey Lynn School by past pupils 2
- Memories of Grey Lynn School by past pupils 3
- The Culture and Population of Grey Lynn School
- Our team
- PKIL - the Research Process at Grey Lynn School
- Learning outcomes
- References and acknowledgements
Our School Taonga: The 1929 Handmade School Magazine
During the decade of the 1920s, a magazine was formed by the students of our school. With the help of their principal it is now a special archive that still remains here today. In the making of the magazine the decoration on the front cover was hand drawn by Alex Page. With the help of: Leslie Tweedie, Roger Shearer, Desmond Pocock, K. Sage, O. Young, J. Maiden, R. Wroblenski, Z. Norrel, Neville Newbold, and E. Sercombe, the school magazine now brings joy to the fellow pupils at our school today. Here are a few poems that we picked out from the school magazine.
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BasketBall is a jolly game.
Especially since Miss Newton came.
Up the ball goes in the air
Where it is caught by a athletic pair
Then its thrown from girl to girl
Coming down in a terrible whirl
Then the goaler pops a goal
If it misses it goes for a roll
To each other's hands its thrown
Till at last the whistles blown.
Farewell old school of honoured fame
Forgotten ne'er shall be your name
As long as tide and time will flow
Our thoughts to you will often go
Here we have learned your motto bright
To value time and do what's right.
Taught by the very best that can
Be produced in all the land
And as another year draws nigh
Standard 6 B. must say goodbye
To teachers, scholars, old and new
We bid you all dear friends Adieu
By Lucy and Faye
(Editor's note: The original magazine is in our School Archives but a facsimile copy is available for people to look at.)
A short biography of Leslie Tweedie
Leslie Tweedie was a pupil at Grey Lynn School, along with his brother Alan. At first the two boys went to Waltham School. Leslie moved to Grey Lynn School in 1926. He made his name well known in his Std 6B year (year 8). While winning best of the class (Dux) he had also been planning with fellow pupils a school magazine in 1929. It was hugely popular and was filled with poems, short stories, comic strips and more. I don't think he would have known that people today would be treasuring it. Leslie left school that year and moved to Kowhai Intermediate. When World War II came around Leslie and Alan both went to war. Fortunately they both came back, but I'm sure things would not be the same again. By Faye
(Information from the school enrolment registers and the World War 2 Memorial boards. The enrolment registers for Grey Lynn School are now lodged with Archives New Zealand at Mangere.)