Grammar Gazette_Issue1_2025
BGGS Badge and Motto
silver ones which we wear as brooches and at the Boys’ School they wear them on their hats’. This description is supported by an image in 1905, where a student can be clearly seen wearing a badge while other students wear a range of jewellery. The Girls Grammar badge remained true to its original design with the only variation being the bar which ran horizontally across and behind the middle of the shield. Possibly this was a practical and aesthetic decision with the bar carrying and hiding the pin which secured the badge. When the bar was not included in the design, the pin was rotated to run vertically, as it does today. In 2014, I suggested the creation of a 140th-anniversary badge which copied the original badge with the horizontal bar on which 1875 and 2015 would be engraved on each side of the shield. Principal, Ms Jacinda Euler, and Chair of the Board of Trustees, Ms Elizabeth Jameson, strongly supported the concept and decided to issue every student in 2015 with the celebratory badge. This badge also welcomed the first Year 7 cohort to the School. Although the School badge is no longer created from precious metal, what it represents remains just as valuable. The badge and the motto, adopted 147 years ago, preserve the history, traditions, and philosophy of the School. The badge immediately identifies each girl as part of a special community, and she wears this public symbol on behalf of both past and future Girls Grammar generations.
There would not be an object of greater substance than the School badge. There is nothing more reflective of your allegiance to the School than wearing its symbol on your uniform. Every Grammar girl wears this important reminder of where she belongs, and the School’s philosophy, every day, at the centre of her tie. The badge was designed originally for the certificates of merit and the labels for the book prizes for Brisbane Grammar School’s prize-giving in 1870. The design was entrusted to Mr Gowans of Queen Street and the printing was completed in Brisbane. As stated in the Brisbane Courier, Tuesday 1 March 1870: ‘At the head of the engraving is a shield enclosing an open book, with the motto underneath adopted by the Trustees— Nil sine labore. The inscription is in Latin and refers only to the present year. As a work of art, we cannot say much for the shield and its enclosure; but it is probable that the Trustees will be able to issue a “new and improved edition” next year.’
It is believed that the concept of the open book on the shield came from the emblem of Oxford University. The School motto has been attributed to the Roman lyric poet, Horace, from his Second Book of Satires 1.9, where the poet is speaking with ‘the Boor’ who states: ‘Life grants nothing to mortals without a great effort’.Nil sine magno vita labore dedit mortalibus, hence, Nil sine labore—nothing without work. The aforementioned ‘new and improved edition’ of the badge and motto did not appear. The badge and motto endured and were subsequently adopted by the girls’ school on its establishment in 1875. The badge was identical to the original BGS design displaying a dominant shield with a delicate ‘floating’ ribbon. Initially, it appears that the girls’ prize book covers were not embossed with the crest and were simply labelled Brisbane Grammar School displaying a bookplate inside the cover with no badge and only inscribed with ‘Girls Grammar School’ at the top of the bookplate. Illustrating this labelling are the oldest prize books held in our archive, presented to Millicent Cairncross for English and Mathematics in 1877. The earliest evidence of a Girls Grammar badge is from an original 1904 postcard written by Marian Morison (1906). Marian drew the Grammar badge and told her friend, Edie, ‘This is our crest and we have little
Captions 1 2002’s final boarders, back row from left, Victoria Fleming, Hope Adams, Annabelle Vaughan, Mijan Patterson. Front row, from left, Breanna Ryan, Holly Clarke and Rosie Walden 2 The Boarders' Plaque 3 A very special badge in the School collection was donated by Patricia Dall (Anderson, 1946). It was fashioned from a two-shilling piece by Mr Steve Grice, who beat the coin flat and fashioned a badge with its tips pointed down and the book raised rather than flat
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33 GAZETTE • ISSUE 1, 2025 |
Brisbane Girls Grammar School
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