St. Joseph's College, Curepipe

Saint Joseph's College
SJC
Address
Commerford Street
Curepipe
Mauritius
Coordinates 20°15′58″S 57°28′12″E / 20.26611°S 57.47000°E / -20.26611; 57.47000Coordinates: 20°15′58″S 57°28′12″E / 20.26611°S 57.47000°E / -20.26611; 57.47000
Information
School type Private Aided, Boys-only secondary school
Motto Ad Altiora Cum Christo
(To The Heights With Christ)
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Founded 1877
Founder Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools
Status Open
Rector Mme. Marie Dominique Seblin
Key people Brother Anthony Furniss(former rector)
Medium of language English, French, Mauritian Creole
Colour(s)             
Song Joseph, 0 Gardien Fidele...
Nickname SJC

St. Joseph’s College (located in Curepipe, Mauritius) is a publicly funded Roman Catholic all-boys secondary school.

History

Founded in 1877 by the Brothers of the Christian Schools, the administration was transferred to the Diocese of Port Louis in 1985. The college has been providing free education since 1977. The school forms part of the Elite colleges in Mauritius. The college obtained its first laureate in the year 1947 named Boulle Bernard and his brother Boulle Michel succeeded him in 1948. The Rector Mr Serge Ng TaT Chung, former student and teacher at the college received the insignia of Member of the Order of the Star and the Key of the Indian Ocean for his contribution in the sector of education.

In the early 1930s, the wooden buildings were replaced by reinforced concrete ones. Physics and Chemistry labs were built in 1939, a gymnasium in 1970, and five classrooms and an amphitheatre in 1994. A pre-vocational department was created in 2001. The college enrolls only students at form 1 level who scored 22 units or more.

The motto Ad Altiora Cum Christo and the badge were created in 1940 by Max Boulle, a former student.

During World War II, the college was requisitioned as a war hospital, although there was no actual fighting in Mauritius. During that time St. Joseph's College students had to study at the Royal College of Curepipe along with their teachers.

Facts

Infrastructure

The college has a school compound, two football grounds, three basketball courts, eight volleyball courts, one gymnasium, one tennis court and an amphitheatre. These components are fully exploited during recess time.

Other activities

Crowded fancy fair in 2011

The end of year period at St. Joseph's College features the leavers Mass followed by the Leavers Dinner and the end-of-year party, otherwise known as Prom Night. The college organises events such as the Fancy F.

Chronology

1877

1883

1899

1927

1933 → The school chapel was inaugurated on 17 November 1933.

1939 → The Science block Physics and chemistry – was added as a separate building in 1939. → The 1939-1945 war caused difficulty to St. Joseph's College and Mauritius in general. Although there was no fighting on the island, communication, exports and imports – especially of food – suffered. The military requisitioned the building and transformed it into a hospital.

A Man of Legend
Bro. Ignatius (Jean Schmitz) was from Germany, born in a militant catholic family. He entered the scholastic of the Brothers of the Christians Schools and was appointed to Mauritius. He arrived in 1913. Not yet acclimatized, he had to face the difficult years of WW1 (1914-18). He was the only German among Italian, British and French religious in the community and only teacher teaching to young children in enemy territory!
Between the two wars, Bro. Ignatius, deputy rector during the time of Bro. Augustus and director as from 1934, gave all he had between the two wars. He restored the college so as to meet the requirements of the regulations. The college was opened to coloured boys in 1929. The college created the commercial section in 1939 under his investigation.
Arrest: On May 20, 1940, the police summoned the director. Some days later, a military vehicle came to the college and arrested Bro. Ignatius. Strangely, an hour later, they brought him back in Curepipe and the Brother resumed his work. Yet, the British thought his presence awkward. On June 7, the authorities pressurized the Archbishop, Mrg. Leen, to signify their decision. Bro. Ignatius should resign from his function as Rector of the College and had not the permission to leave the college premises.
Post war: The Education Ordinance, 1944 came into being. It offered more liberty to teaching and corrected the privilege of state schools over private ones.
The new Code needed secondary school teachers to have at least the Cambridge School Certificate. Brothers from Mauritius and Réunion performed well in the College of Preceptors examinations of the London Chamber of Commerce and the University of London and Cambridge. From this point, the college would present students for the Higher School Certificate examinations and satisfy the demands of the Department of Education so that its Form VI students may be eligible for the English Scholarship. To achieve this, more qualified personnel was required, the only solution was link the community to an English speaking Province.

1946

1947/1946

1955

1970

1975

1977

1985

1994

1997

1999

2001

2009

2010

2011

Notable alumni

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.