St. Malachy's College

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St. Malachy's College
Coláiste Naomh Maolmhaodhóg
250px
St. Malachy's College front exterior
"Gloria Ab Intus" (Glory from within)
Location
36 Antrim Road, Belfast, BT15 2AE
Northern Ireland
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Information
Type Grammar School
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1833
Closed July – August
LEA Belfast Education and Library Board
Principal Paul McBride
Gender All-Male
Age 11 to 18
Number of students 1024 (approx)
Color(s)         
Athletics Badminton, Basketball, Cross country running, Gaelic, Golf, Hurling, Rugby, Soccer, Swimming, Volleyball
School Years Year 8 – Year 14
Soccer team Malachians F.C.
Website

St. Malachy's College (Irish: Coláiste Naomh Maolmhaodhóg) is the oldest Roman Catholic grammar school in the province of Ulster, and the third oldest in Ireland.[1]

The college was founded in 1833 by Bishop William Crolly, about 50 years after the repeal of the penal laws, which had outlawed, among other things, the celebration of the Catholic Mass, and the provision for the education of the Catholics of Ireland. The school is located on the former site of Vicinage Park, just north of Belfast city centre. Its motto is "gloria ab intus" which translates from Latin as "glory from within".

St. Joseph's Seminary, the seminary for the Diocese of Down and Connor,[2] was situated on the same campus. This was officially known as the Diocesan Seminary at St Malachy's, and colloquially as "the wing" due to it being a wing of the college building. The Diocesan Seminary moved site to the Cliftonville Road during the Christmas holidays of 2012, and has taken the name St. Malachy's Diocesan Seminary, in recognition of both its history and its future.

Students

St. Malachy's is a boys' school providing education for approximately 1,200 students aged 11 to 18. The catchment area of the College is wide, as it is the only male Catholic grammar school in north Belfast: students come from not only local areas such as Ardoyne and New Lodge, but also suburban and rural towns in County Antrim such as Carrickfergus, Antrim town and Randalstown.

Curriculum

The college today boasts impressive records in both GCSE and A-level examinations, and has had many recent sporting successes, especially in athletics and basketball.[3] The college is also noted for a having a strong music department and was recently designated as the first specialist music college in Northern Ireland.[4]

Personnel

The current Chairman of the Board of Governors for the College is Sir Gerry Loughran.

Location and campus

File:Vicinage, illustration inside the college, which is on the site of Vicinage House.JPG
Vicinage House, an illustration inside the college, which is on the site of the historically significant house Vicinage

St. Malachy's College is located in the Water Works electoral ward of north Belfast, between two main roads (the A6 Antrim Road and the A52 Crumlin Road), close to where they meet at Carlisle Circus.

The grounds of the College are accessed primarily from a tree-lined avenue on the Antrim Road, which leads to the front quadrangle, known as "the quad". The foremost building, which comprises 3 sides of the quadrangle and faces westward, is the oldest part of the College and dates to its earliest days in the 1830s. 'A' and 'B' blocks, housing the History, Classics and Drama departments, as well as administrative offices, the Library and the Chapel, take up much of these 3 sides; the remaining rooms consist of priests' apartments, abandoned dormitories and the Upper Study Hall. The more modern St. Joseph's seminary building completes the fourth side of the quadrangle. The College canteen and Music block are also accessed through the front quadrangle.

The concreted back quadrangle, bounded by the College Hall (westward), the gymnasium (northward) and the old building (southward and eastward), has in recent years been enhanced by several flower beds. The Mater Infirmorum hospital, and a small shrine to the Virgin Mary, both overlook the back quadrangle. The College Hall is the focal point of dramatic productions within the College, as well as assemblies and examinations. In recent years, the College's music department has eschewed the College Hall for its annual concerts, in favour of the more acoustically advantaged Ulster Hall in Bedford Street.

Behind the College Hall is 'D' block, completed in the 1960s, and the adjoining 'E' block, completed in the 1970s. Both consist largely of standard classrooms, with the exception of Physics laboratories on the top floor of 'D' block and Biology laboratories on the top floor of 'E' block. Since the 1980s, the second floor of 'E' block has also become home to the Computing department. The school's Lecture Theatre is on the ground floor of 'E' block.

'C' block, located to the north of 'E' block, was opened in the 1990s and replaced a row of temporary classrooms. It now houses the Chemistry, Art and Technology departments.

At the rear of the College grounds is the Sports Hall, the centrepiece of which is a basketball court, renovated in recent years with a multi-purpose hardwood floor. A synthetic pitch, laid in 2006, is adjacent to the Sports Hall. For security reasons, the pitch is surrounded by high walls on three sides, separating the College grounds from the neighbouring Crumlin Road prison (now derelict) and the closing Girdwood British Army barracks on Cliftonpark Avenue.

Notable Alumni

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Notable events since 2007

  • The cross-country athletics team took gold at the All-Ireland Schools' Championships.
  • The college's orchestra and choir visited Washington D.C. in April 2007.
  • Trevor Ringland, MBE (solicitor, politician, former Irish rugby winger and Irish Rugby F.U. committee member) joined with sporting pupils, past and present, from neighbouring schools, to launch the £3.7 million "Sharing Education Programme", which aims to bring Specialist schools in full contact with their local communities in November 2007.[clarification needed]
  • The College celebrated its 175th Anniversary in April 2008 with a concert at the Waterfront Hall in Belfast. It also gathered the students and staff together in the College "Quad" area for a special photo which has not been taken in over 50 years for the college.
  • Over the mid-term of the autumn term in 2008 the pupils involved in the senior choir and chamber orchestra made pilgrimages to Rome and Vatican City as part of its 175th anniversary celebrations.

Current members of staff

  • Principal: Paul McBride, succeeded David Lambon (2011–2014) to become the third Principal and non-clerical head of St Malachy's College, all previous heads of the school having held the title President and been ordained Catholic priests.
  • Vice Principals: Deirdre McCusker and Lois Stewart
  • Rector: The Very Rev. Michael Spence

Former Presidents

File:Bishop Patrick Walsh.jpg
Bishop Patrick Walsh (former President of the college)
  • The Very Rev. Canon John McMullan, B.A., B.D. 1940–1950
  • The Very Rev. Patrick Kerr B.A., Ph.B., S.T.L. 1950-1960. Previously French and Latin Master
  • The Very Rev. Canon Walter Larkin, B.A., S.T.L. 1960-1970. Previously Dean of the Seminary and Mathematics Master
  • The Very Rev. Canon Patrick Walsh, M.A., S.T.L. 1970-1983. Previously Chaplain to Queen's University, Belfast
  • The Very Rev. Canon Noel Conway, B.Sc., B.D. 1983–1995. Previously Head of Physics
  • The Very Rev. Donal McKeown, B.A., S.T.L., M.B.A. 1995–2001 Previously Dean of the Seminary and Religious Studies Teacher

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Diocese of Down and Connor
  3. St. Malachy’s College
  4. Specialist Schools – Music Regional Training Unit Northern Ireland

External links