Our Lady and St. Patrick's College, Knock
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Our Lady and Saint Patrick's College is a Catholic diocesan grammar school in Knock, Belfast, Northern Ireland.
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[edit] Foundation
The school opened on Monday, 4 September 1967 on a 20-acre site at Gortgrib in the Cherryvalley area of east Belfast with Fr. Joseph Conway as President. A sister college of St. Malachy's College and St MacNissi’s College, Garron Tower
By the previous April the need for a new boys' grammar school catering for the North Down and East Belfast area had become urgent. There was no provision for Catholic grammar education east of the Lagan and it was clear, given the trends of the time, that there would be no capacity in the existing two Belfast grammar schools for boys (St. Malachy's and St. Mary's, Christian Brothers) for the September 1967 intake. Three priests from St. Malachy's - Frs Joseph Conway, John O'Sullivan and Albert McNally were appointed by Bishop William Philbin to found the new diocesan college.
The site for the new school was Providence Farm at Cherryvalley. The property had been in the hands of the Diocese of Down and Connor since the middle of the 19th century and some of the older residents of the area could remember Sisters of Mercy visiting the site in pony and trap for provisions for the Mater Infirmorum Hospital.
The College motto, chosen by Bishop William Philbin, was In omnibus gratias agite I Thess, 5:18
[edit] College and the Troubles
The College had originally been planned for an enrollment of over 800 pupils. In the event the civil disturbances of the early 1970s had a profound effect on the development of the College. The Catholic population of the intake area was subjected to intimidation and serious movement of population resulted. Very many families of the students left the areas, especially in East Belfast, and the College buildings were themselves subjected to frequent sectarian attacks.
Permanent buildings were planned from 1970 and were completed by 1979 by which time the enrollment had stabilised at about 500 pupils. Throughout this period almost all the pupils were bussed into school in the morning and home again straight after class in the afternoon depriving them of almost all extra-curricular activity. Through an agreement with Translink the school has had late buses running on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays for after school extra curricular activities since the early 80s.
[edit] Former staff
Bishop Donal McKeown was on the College staff from 1978-1983 along with several other priests of the Diocese of Down and Connor
The internationally-acclaimed poet Medbh McGuckian taught at the College for many years before leaving education to concentrate fulltime on her writing. Teaching alongside her in the English department was the BBC Radio Ulster broadcaster Seamus McKee.
[edit] Amalgamation
In 1984 the College Trustees, chaired by Bishop Cahal Daly proposed that from from September 1985 the College should become co-educational and remain on the Knock site through amalgamation with the Sacred Heart of Mary Grammar School in Holywood, County Down. This new foundation became known as Our Lady and St. Patrick's College, Knock with an enrollment of almost one thousand pupils, and the motto Gratias Agamus (let us give thanks)[1].
Fr. Joseph Conway remained as President of the amalgamated school until 1987 when he was succeeded by Fr. Patrick McKenna, parish priest of Dundrum Co. Down. In 1999 Mr. John Allen took over as principal of the school, who was the first lay person appointed to this position in the school's history.
[edit] New Building[2]
Final designs and location of the new building have been agreed upon but as of 2008 building work is yet to begin. The original estimated completion of late 2010/early 2011 seems unlikely. Carmor were awarded the bid to build the new building. The school had to install a large amount of mobile classrooms during it's lifetime to accommodate the increase in pupils. The original building was designed for approximately 800 pupils but with an average enrollment of 1250 from the late 90s onwards it was clearly over stretched. There were approximately 30 mobile classrooms in the form of 15 double room mobiles.
The new building will be built in the current position of the all weather pitch, dining hall, tennis courts and part of the sports hall. Due to the hilly nature of the campus this will require significant excavation and levelling. In the position of the grass bank a new driveway system will be built to allow buses to pick up and set down. The Kingsway Gardens and Gilnahirk Road entrances will remain in similar use with one allowing cars and another buses, respectively. The current grass pitch will remain with a new all weather pitch built where the current science block, administration building and upper half of the main classroom block are now. New tennis courts will be built adjacent to the current grass pitch on redundant land. Staff car parking will be built in the current position of the grass bank extending to the front of the new building and terminating with a sizeable area in the position of the current technology block.
During construction part of Tullycarnet Park (currently unused) will be used to facilitate building equipment and materials so as to cause as little disruption to school activities as possible. Design proposals and timelines seem to be facilitating the original idea of using the main buildings now for teaching whilst the new building is being constructed. The new building will be much more environmentally friendly than the previous, using design techniques to manipulate the sun for heating and ventilation as well as rainwater being recycled. Sensors will monitor the quality and temperature of the air to control cooling, heating and recycling. There will also be light sensors to adjust electrical lighting depending on how much sunlight is entering the room.
[edit] References
- ^ Our Lady & St Patrick's College, Knock - College Motto
- ^ Our Lady & St Patrick's College, Knock - Agreement Reached Regarding the New School
As of March 2008, the College was in the spotlight when one of it's Year 14 pupils, Niamh Perry competed in the BBC1 competition I'd Do Anything, reaching the final five.