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Corfe House

The current Corfe House began in the building which is now known as Selwyn. That  building was originally a Master’s house, then it accommodated Condell’s House, and  with the increase in dayboy numbers in the 1960s, the residential part of the House became the fourth dayboy House, Corfe, and upstairs was turned into a biology laboratory and a classroom.  

The name Corfe had earlier been associated with a House within the College. In the 1870s those boys who had boarded with the Headmaster, Charles Carteret Corfe, had, in the tradition of the time, taken on the name of their Housemaster.

Corfe House has taken the tui or parson bird’s head as its symbol.  This forms the crest of the College Arms, and the white tuft with almost black plumage reflects College’s colours - black and white. In 2002  Condell's moved across Rolleston Avenue to the new dayboy Houses in Gloucester Street.   The building in which it was once housed was re-named Selwyn after George Augustus Selwyn, the First Warden of Christ’s College and the only Anglican Bishop of the whole of New Zealand.