Saint George's College, founded in 1936 and run by the Congregation of Holy Cross, is a private bilingual school in Santiago, Chile.
Fathers William Havey, Alfred Send, and Joseph Doherty believed they were going to do university work, not knowing that "college" meant a school of first through 12th graders.
A group of parents and teachers, dissatisfied with the Liberation Theology measures imposed by Father Gerard Whelan during the early 1970s, broke off in 1972 and formed Colegio Tabancura, an Opus Dei-run boys' school.
The school hosts extensive sports facilities, including a multi-sport gymnasium, an athletic track with bleachers with a capacity of 3,000 people, an exercise machine room, volleyball, soccer, basketball, and rugby courts.
Other facilities include the nursery, computer labs, rooms equipped for music and arts, the scout corner (project selected for the Chile Architecture Biennial), the chapel, the theater, amphitheater, and the 11º and 12º grade building.