On 6 February 1962, the St Alban’s College Foundation is legally established. The Trustees are:
Bishop Edward Knapp-Fisher, Honourable Adrian Roberts, Acting Judge of the Supreme Court, Gerald Savage, Mello MacRobert, Bob Hamilton, William Davidson and Monty Knoll.
The school was founded on 1 February 1963 with a student body of 37 boys and 3 masters. It now has 580 boys and 43 teachers plus support staff.
The founder-Headmaster, Anton Murray, was a South African cricketer, who worked for twenty years at the school. Paul Marsh was headmaster during a transitional phase lasting for four years. Ronnie Todd introduced many radical changes during his ten years as headmaster, and following his position as headmaster went on to open St Peter's College. The fourth headmaster was Grant Nupen, who was one of the 37 Foundation Scholars in 1963 and went on to become the first Head Boy, a position he held for three years.
Under the direction of the fifth headmaster, Tom Hamilton, the school celebrated its 50th birthday in 2013.
Headmasters
Started
Finished
Name
1963
1981
Anton Murray
1982
1986
Paul Marsh
1987
1997
Ronnie Todd
1996
2001
Grant Nupen
2001
2016
Thomas Hamilton
2017
current
Shane Kidwell
Sport
Sports offered include rugby and hockey (the main sports in the winter time), cricket, swimming, rowing, basketball and water polo (in summer). Other sports are golf, soccer, tennis, squash, athletics and cross-country running (also known as bounds).
The school has a singing group, the Barbershop Boys, comprising singers selected from the chapel choir, usually around 15-20 boys, who sing a cappella. The Barbershop Boys began the school's "Music Tours" with their tour to Argentina in 2004.
Notable alumni
Mlungisi Bali (Class of 2009) - South African professional rugby player