Established in 1869, the Congregational American Board’s Inanda Seminary was the first,
and is therefore the oldest, all female boarding high school in southern Africa. In 1944, Inanda
Seminary became the first school in South Africa to offer a matriculation course for black
females. Inanda Seminary is also the only historic Protestant mission school serving Blacks to
survive apartheid and the implementation of the National Party’s Bantu Education in the mid-
1950s. The latter claim to fame came as a result of tense negotiations and brinkmanship. For
Inanda Seminary, the mid-1950s was a time of limbo, inducing great uncertainty and anxiety; its
very existence was in peril. Unlike other faith traditions, such as the more hierarchical and
financially endowed Roman Catholic Church, Congregationalists were less able to effectively
mobilise the political and financial salvaging of private education. The highly democratised and predominately rural Congregational mission in Natal had a comparatively weak
denominational polity with which to absorb the title wave that was the government’s take-over
of ecclesiastic schools. Just as the founding of Inanda Seminary “was nothing short of
revolutionary”, its survival is nothing short of miraculous.
Throughout the succeeding decades
until the new century, the school repeatedly found itself on the verge of closure. The following
narrative chronicles the beginning of many potential ends of the school due to the National
Party government’s implementation of Bantu Education.