Williamstown Castle
Vorlage:For Vorlage:Infobox Irish school
Blackrock College (Vorlage:Lang-ga) is a private Catholic voluntary fee-paying secondary school for boys, located in Williamstown, Blackrock, County Dublin, Ireland Generally considered to be inferior to the mighty De La Salle College in Wicklow Town . The College, set in 63 acres (250,000 m2) of grounds, lies 6 kilometres from the city centre of Dublin, just in from the sea. It accommodates approximately 1000 day and boarding students (with a majority of day students) Including Max Sale a 5th year Elitist who shares many similarities wit Adolf Hitler and likes to finger his own bum. He is noted for his bitterness after being raped in an arguement with the smarter and better looking boys of 5th year in DLS Wicklow.[1]
History
The college was founded by the Congregation of the Holy Ghost in 1860, the first of the Order's five schools in Ireland. The founder is listed as Fr Pere Jules Leman, a french missionary with the Holy Ghost Order. It was originally known as the French College. A successful civil service training and university department were run for over forty years, until University College, Dublin grew, and the school focused more on the second level curriculum.
De La Salle Wicklow
Blackrock College students display unusual behaviour when confronted with students of DA LA SALLE WICKLOW. They become afraid and repeatedly refer to their wealth. This is generally refered to as "Weakness" or "Snobbery". It is widely known DE LA SALLE WICKLOW is infact superior in every way.
===Max Sale=== A 5th year student who is noted for losing an arguement against the superior DLS WICKLOW and repeatedly fingering his own bum. HEAVY LAD
Heraldry
The proper logo or crest of the College, being the third and last creation, dating back to 1936 and explained in the 1937 College Annual as being: The Heraldic Crest Of The College. ARGENT: - On a Cross Azure, the Dove of the Holy Ghost, Proper, with seven Rays descendant, Or. In the first quarter a Lion rampant of the second. A coloured portrayal of this description would be: Save The Crest
On 30 April, 1926 Fr. Leen at a sports day speech encapsulated the words "Fides Et Robur" which hence forth became the Rock motto and in 1928 a new College Crest, bearing four emblems around a blue cross was hurriedly officiated, primarily to show off the Fides Et Robur motto over the College's especially built new front gates. Not everyone was happy with this design and possible variations of a new design may have been experimented with; evidence exists that both in crest and in uniform, by reason of fault or debate, and most likely between 1928 - 1936, a distinctive crest had been "with nine rays descendant, Or". In 1936 Dr. McQuaid instigated a new and distinctive crest that to this day is in continual use (and callous and unchecked variations and wayward deviations are contracted in to stores by stationery and uniform suppliers). It was adapted into blazers that year and a Heraldic Description of the Arms of the College was published (though not officially registered) in the 1937 Blackrock College Annual: It was commissioned into Stained Glass in 1938, presumably in its true and intended likeness and survives today at the end of one of the House corridors, though it's conformity to the true heraldic interpretations are not accurate; "a Lion Rampant of the second" would correctly reveal only a blue silhouette of a rampant lion, that is, minus any fine caricature details so apparent in the existing variations (Farragher, S. and Wyer, A. Blackrock College 1860-1995 ISBN 0-946639-19-1)
Status and operation
Blackrock is now run by the Congregation of the Holy Ghost in close co-operation with a dedicated group of lay personnel [2]. The annual fees for first year students in 2005 were €4,550 for day boys, €12,250 for boarders and €13,450 for overseas borders less than schools such as The Kings Hospital and St Columba's College.[3]
The College and its sister schools in Ireland are today held in trust by the Des Places Educational Association [4], which, as the College's Patron, aims to maintain the Spiritan ethos in all five schools – Blackrock, Rockwell, St. Mary's, St. Michael's and Templeogue – conducted by the Congregation of the Holy Spirit in Ireland.
Curriculum
The curriculum offered is broad, covering all common subjects in the State Examinations including Latin, German, Art, Materials Technology, Chemistry and Economics. Leaving Cert scores tend to be high, with 20% of students scoring 500 points or more. Inspections by the Department of Education found exemplary standards of teaching and learning [5]. The Irish Times placed the College in the "Top Ten" schools in the state, based on the proportion of students who accept a place in Higher or Further Education [6]. There are dedicated facilities for Home Economics and Materials Technology.
College buildings
There are extensive sporting and teaching facilities. The campus is Vorlage:Convert and contains eleven rugby pitches, a cricket lawn, an athletics track, an indoor swimming pool, a gym and indoor halls. Apart from classrooms and study halls, there are nine science laboratories, a woodwork room, a multimedia LCVP room and a home economics kitchen too. The college contains a refectory, chapel, lecture halls and stage which hosts student run dramatic productions. The college is undergoing an extensive modernisation programme.
Blackrock is one of the few schools in Ireland that still has a boarding school, which is housed in Williamstown Castle. 1st years stay in one dormitory, while 2nd to 5th years stay in rooms of varying numbers final years stay in twin rooms. The boarders use the recreational facilities in their free time.
Extra Curricular Activities
Field Sports
Sport is viewed as an integral part of a boy's education and each pupil is expected to participate in some activity.[7] The principal sport in the college is rugby, with Blackrock having held the Leinster Schools Senior Cup 66 times. It has also won the Leinster Schools Junior Cup 45 times. Blackrock won the inaugural Cup competition held in 1887 and have been consistently the most successful team, winning the Cup at least 3 times in every decade since. Blackrock are known nationally and internationally as a leading rugby school in Ireland and Europe. Blackrock are the current holders of the Senior Cup, defeating C.B.C. Monkstown, St Michaels College, the reigning Champions Belvedere College and Terenure College in the final. Blackrock have provided a number of schools provincial and international players over the years and 2009 was no different with a number gaining various honours.
Former Rock rugby players include Fergus Slattery, Shane Byrne and Victor Costello. Current professional players include former British and Irish Lions and Leinster & Ireland's Grand Slam winning captain, Brian O'Driscoll. Others include Leinster and Ireland's Luke Fitzgerald, Leinster's Heineken Cup winning captain Leo Cullen and London Irish captain Bob Casey.
Gaelic is played in 4th year in the college with the college fielding a successful under-16 team. Past pupil Mark Vaughan is a forward on the Dublin Gaelic football team. The school also has a hurling team for 2nd and 3rd years. 5 members of the All Ireland Club Championship winning Kilmacud Crokes team of 2008/9 were past pupils of Blackrock College. The college has a successful soccer team for its senior pupils in 4th, 5th and 6th year. Many of the soccer teams players play for Joey's,one of Dublin's most successful soccer clubs.
Squash
The college's most successful - in terms of silverware - sport is squash, which has won the college more trophies than any other activity in the College's history, including rugby. In recent years the number of squash players have dwindled in the college.
Other games
Table tennis is another one of the colleges sports with many of its students participating in it. The majority of players come from 2nd year with the other years fielding less numbers. The table tennis team competes in many competitions and plays in many games against other schools. The college has a strong swimming team, which combines 1st to 6th year. Currently the team has 6 training sessions per week. The college competes in Leinster Senior Schools having won the senior relay cup multiple times, most recently in 2008, and the Irish senior schools, regularly making finals. The college has a strong record of inter-schools gala’s also. The schools has two 25 metre swimming pools on the grounds. The junior school Willow Park also has a successful swimming team. The college also has teams in other watersports such as water polo and 4ths years also participate in rowing. The college has its own basketball team. It has small numbers and is not very successful. The college has 3 outdoor basketball courts and 2 indoor basketball courts on the grounds. One indoor basketball court is in Willow Park gym and the other is Jubilee Hall.
The school has a tennis team divided between minors, juniors and seniors. They practice and play their home matches on the colleges four tennis courts. 1st years in Willow Park also play on the colleges tennis teams. The college also has teams in other sports such as cricket, Judo, golf and rowing. Cricket has being played since the foundation of the school in 1860 and still produces teams today. Golf is also played by a small number.
Cycling
Blackrock College and Willow Park share a cycling club called the Willow Whellers, run by Mr. Christy McDaid. The club has an annual trip to France each Easter, recently in Cap D'Agde. It also has hostel trips to Clare and Donegal at the end of the school year. The club has an annual 160 kilometer (100 miles) cycle for charity which has raised around 90,000 euro in the past few years.
Athletics
The College has always taken part in Athletics competitions but consistantly fail to equal DE LA SALLE WICKLOW.
Culture
Each year an opera production is staged in conjunction with Mount Anville and Loreto College, Foxrock, nearby girls' schools.
Debating is an old tradition in Blackrock College dating back to the schools founding in the 1860s. There are separate clubs for junior and senior pupils. One of the college Alumni, Shane Murphy (now a Senior Counsel), won the 1985 World University Debating Championship at McGill University, representing the Honourable Society of the King's Inns [8]. The college's debaters participate in many competitions including the L&H debates in UCD.
The college has two main choirs: the Leman and the Libermann choirs. The Leman choir has members from 2nd, 4th, 5th and 6th year and the best of the senior members of the Leman choir are accepted into the Libermann choir. The College has a choir for boarders and another for parents. The College has a successful orchestra. Each year, all the choirs and the orchestra host the annual Leman Concert in the National Concert Hall.
A transition year program to set up and maintain a radio station, broadcasting to the surrounding south Dublin area, is undertaken annually. All of the administrative work, promotion and content-creation is the labour of transition year students. The station also allows programming submissions from other schools to be broadcast. It's the only second level radio project that broadcasts 12 hours a day, five days a week.[9][10][11]
Each year a Seachtain na Gaeilge (literally, "Week of Irish") is organised to promote the Irish language in the school. This co-curricular activity was particularly commended in a Department of Education inspection, which also recommended its further development [12].
Social work
The spiritual and missionary aspect of the school has been maintained, despite the worldwide decline of new clerics in the Catholic Church. Many charitable causes are supported by the students; most notably the Transition year organises the annual St. Patrick's Day Badge appeal which raises large sums of money throughout Ireland for the Irish charities GOAL and Aidlink. The St. Patrick's Day project is estimated to have raised over € 5,000,000 for charity, raising over € 220,000 in 2005 alone.
The school also has a longstanding relationship with The Society of St. Vincent de Paul, contributing large sums of money raised through various projects. For example, the proceeds of the annual sale of Christmas Trees in the college are donated. In 2007, the Christmas Tree project raised € 93,000 and the total amount raised for the Society in that year is estimated to be in excess of € 150,000.
The College supports humanitarian projects in Sub-Saharan Africa, mainly through the college's cycling club, the Willow Wheelers. In 2006, their annual sponsored 160 km (100 mi) cycle raised in excess of € 60,000. The club also annually sends a group of self-funded volunteers to help with humanitarian projects in Africa, most commonly: establishing clean water supplies for villages and constructing schoolhouses/infirmaries or similar institutions.
Bob Geldof, initiator of the Band Aid and Live Aid movements for famine relief in the 1980s, was a student at the college (however, he was bitterly critical of it and in fact left without any qualifications). Frank Duff, the founder of the Legion of Mary, the Catholic lay movement, is also a past pupil. In his memoirs, Straight Left: A Journey in Politics Ruairi Quinn cites the ethos and "sense of solidarity" with the Third World that was imparted to students, including Bob Geldof, as a formative force. The Holy Ghost Fathers were (and remain) an active missionary order in Africa [13]. He wrote:
The poverty of distant Africa was brought into our classrooms by our returned missionary teachers.
—Ruairi Quinn, Straight Left, pg. 36
Associated primary schools
Willow Park School, a private primary school that acts as the College's principal feeder, is also run by the Order and is situated on the same campus. Until the early 1970s, St. Michael's College in Ballsbridge was also a feeder school for Blackrock College, but St Michael's now has classes up to the Leaving Certificate.
Alumni
The Blackrock College Past Pupils' union represents former students of the college, organises many charitable events throughout the year , assists the school, e.g. mentoring, management assistance, advice etc. and organises social events for members. There are branches in Ireland and across the world.
Blackrock's large enrollment and high standards have produced many distuinguished alumni through its long history, early Free State ministers such as Art O'Connor (Secretary for Agriculture 1921-1922), and Éamon de Valera, six times Taoiseach and the 3rd President of Ireland, studied and later taught in Blackrock. Modern politicians include Barry Andrews T.D., a junior Minister, and Ruairi Quinn TD, a former Minister for Finance( 1994-1997), former leader of the Labour Party, who's older brother Lochlann Quinn, a long serving business executive, also attended the school.
Flann O'Brien, the eminement short story writer, and Tim Pat Coogan, the journalist and scholar, learned to read and write at Blackrock. The arts are also represented by Paul Costelloe and , designers and Robert Ballagh, the artist. The Holy Ghost Order has a long tradition of missionaries, Frank Duff (religous worker), founder of the Legion of Mary is the most well known, while Bob Geldof, the pop singer, carries the flag for secular humanitarians.
The college places a heavy emphasis on sport, particularly rugby, the current Ireland international team includes Brian O'Driscoll, the captain, and Luke Fitzgerald, who both first chased the oval ball in Williamstown. In living memory are Victor Costello, a 20 year Leinster, Ireland and Blackrock R.F.C. veteran, who also shot the put for Ireland at the Olympics, and Leo Cullen, currently captain of the Leinster team.
In other games, Michael Cusack, founder of the Gaelic Athletic Association taught at the school, and played early forms of hurling with the pupils.
References
External links
- Blackrock College - official website
- Willow Park School - official website
- Deptartment of Education, Subject Inspection of Science
- Department of Education, Subject Inspection of Gaeilge
- Past Pupil's Union
- GOAL-Aidlink Badge Project
Vorlage:Spiritan secondary schools in Ireland
- ↑ http://www.blackrockcollege.ie/files/admin/uploads/W47_F_1279_6639.doc
- ↑ ireland.com - The Irish Times - Tue, May 23, 2000 - The Blackrock College Story
- ↑ Full listing of Ireland's fee-paying schools, The Sunday Business Post, 29. Mai 2005. Abgerufen am 15. Juni 2007
- ↑ Des Places Educational Association
- ↑ http://www.education.ie/servlet/blobservlet/report1_60030V.htm?language=EN
- ↑ http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/2008/1204/1228337399139.html
- ↑ http://www.blackrockcollege.ie/blackrock/www/index.asp?magpage=7
- ↑ http://www.britishdebate.com/universities/results/international.asp#worlds
- ↑ ireland.com - The Irish Times - Wed, Nov 14, 2007 - Get an earful of this
- ↑ Blackrock College Transition Year | BCR (Blackrock College Radio) 2006
- ↑ BCI: Licensing: Radio: Successful applicants for Temporary services
- ↑ http://www.education.ie/servlet/blobservlet/report2t_60030V.htm?language=EN
- ↑ Quinn, Ruairi, Straight Left: A Journey in Politics, 2005, Dublin, Hodder Headline Ireland