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Christian Brothers College, Cork

Coordinates: 51°54′13″N 8°28′03″W / 51.9036°N 8.4674°W / 51.9036; -8.4674
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CBC Cork
Location
Map
Sidney Hill, Wellington Rd., Cork City, Ireland T23 FY09
Coordinates51°54′13″N 8°28′03″W / 51.9036°N 8.4674°W / 51.9036; -8.4674
Information
TypePrivate
MottoCerta Bonum Certamen
(Fight the good fight)
Religious affiliation(s)Christianity (Catholic)
Established1888
FounderBr. J.D Burke
TrustEdmund Rice Schools' Trust
ChairpersonDr. Larrie Martin
PrincipalDavid Lordon[1]
GenderBoys
Enrollment1000+ (Preparatory & Secondary combined)[2]
Nickname'Christians'
School fees€4,500[3]
Alumni nameOld Christians
Colors
Websitehttp://www.cbccork.ie

Christian Brothers College, Cork (CBC Cork, colloquially known as Christians) is a fee-paying school under the trusteeship of the Edmund Rice Schools Trust in Cork City, Ireland.[4][5][6][7]

Their sister school in Co. Dublin is CBC Monkstown.[2]

History

[edit]
Saint Patrick's Place building

In the mid 19th-century, the Vincentian Fathers maintained a seminary at Saint Patrick's Place in Cork City, known as the Cork Diocesan Seminary. In 1888 a new seminary with residential accommodation was completed at Farranferris, and the Vincentian ecclesiastical students transferred there. The-then Catholic Bishop of Cork, Most Rev. Dr. O'Callaghan, invited the Christian Brothers to take charge of the St Patrick's Place establishment. From this point, the school existed in its current form.[8][9][10]

As per a Cork Examiner report from 21 August 1888, the Most Rev. Dr. O'Callaghan declared at the school's opening that:

"I can promise that this institution will yet become famous in Cork, and it will be loved by the people."[11]

The Worshipful Mayor of Cork Corporation, John O'Brien, stated that:

"I am sure that when the proceedings of the day are read in the morning, it will give the greatest satisfaction to the citizens to find that a school of this high-class was opened and carried on in their midst... From this forward, there will be no reason why any Cork merchant should send his children out of Cork to be educated. To be educated at home, under home influences, is undoubtedly a great advantage to children. This is a want which has been frequently spoken of amongst the intellectual middle-classes of our city."[11]

William J. Lane and John Hooper, both members of Cork Corporation and Nationalist Members of Parliament (MPs), were also present at the official opening.[11]

Br. James Dominic Burke, a noted pioneer in Irish education, served as the school's founding president that year.[12]

In a report of the British government's Committee for Education and Social Economy, CBC Cork was named as a prime example of Catholic boys' education in Ireland, amongst "contributions from the great British public schools" to be featured at the St. Louis International Exhibition of 1904.[13]

From the beginning, CBC was principally involved in preparing pupils for university entry,[citation needed] and operated on St Patrick's Place for one hundred years.[8] In Where Finbarr Played, Professor John A. Murphy refers to both CBC Cork and PBC Cork as "elitist feeder schools."[14] In the Intermediate Education Commission of 1899, chaired by Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, Christopher Palles, CBC Cork was one of only nine Roman Catholic schools in Ireland to be interviewed. In a paper published by the University of Liverpool, Dr. Ciaran O'Neill notes that "from the composition of this set of Catholic representatives, we can deduce the centrality of the Catholic elite schools to decision-making and state policy."[15] In a 2003 Oireachtas debate, NUI Senator, Brendan Ryan, derisively referred to the school, along with Belvedere College, PBC Cork, and Clongowes Wood College, as "elitist education."[16]

The school historically published an annual, titled the Collegian.[17] During World War I, the school produced a special edition, titled Collegian 1917: CBC at the Front.[18]

During World War I, over 300 of the school's past pupils served in the Allied forces, which was relatively unique for an Irish Catholic school. Anthony P. Quinn, writing in Wigs & Guns: Irish Barristers During the Great War, explains that "discipline" and other characteristics beneficial for military service were instilled in 'Christians', in the same manner as public boys' schools in England. The school at this time was noted as "catering for the sons of comfortable families, and, as such could hardly be expected to be a hot-bed of revolutionary ideas". Unlike other Christian Brothers' schools, there existed a "vital thrust" to "support Britain in her hour of peril", and visits by past pupils wearing khaki aided a recruitment drive. The school is referenced in the same manner in Steven O'Connor's Irish Officers in the British Forces: 1922-1945, as well as Turtle Bunbury's The Glorious Madness: Tales of the Irish and the Great War, Ken Kinsella's Out of the Dark, 1914-1918: South Dubliners Who Fell in the Great War, and Nigel McCrery's Into Touch: Rugby Internationals Killed in the Great War. Several lawyers who had attended the school became officers in the British Army throughout this period. Among those who perished in World War I included past pupil and Irish rugby international, Vincent McNamara.[17][19][20][21][18]

The school was reported as being expected to suffer from the cut in State aid to private schools in 2008.[22] In 2009, the school was scrutinised by the Irish Independent for its receipt of State subsidies, along with Blackrock, Belvedere, Clongowes, Wesley, Mount Anville, King's Hospital, Terenure, Kilkenny, and St. Andrew's.[23] It features in the Irish Independent's annual feature on private school fees.[24][25][26]

In April 2013, the Evening Echo referred to it as one of Cork's "most historic and exclusive institutions."[27] In November 2013, President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins, commemorated the school's 125th anniversary.[28]

It featured in the top 10 of the Irish Times list of feeder schools for progression to university education in 2017.[29] As of 2019, it possessed a 100 percent rate of student progression to university.[30] As of 2024, the school's chairperson was Dr. Larrie Martin.[31]

Recent development

[edit]

Marking the centenary in 1988, the college moved from its original site to a new location, one hundred metres away, atop Sidney Hill.[8]

In 1994, the school appointed its first lay principal, Dr. Laurence Jordan, who held the position until 2018.[32][33] In the same period (1996-1998) modernisation works took place on the sports facilities at Lansdowne, and an extension to the college complex itself included improved dining facilities and the creation of a complex for sixth year students.[citation needed] By 2008, the school's annual fees were €3,100 for first year and €2,850 for subsequent years.[34] As of 2023, it was the most expensive day school in County Cork.[35]

Though the Christian Brothers retain a presence on the board of management, as trustees, CBC is now staffed entirely by lay teachers, and is recognised as one of Ireland's leading educational establishments at secondary level. In addition to its board of management, it is under the stewardship of the Edmund Rice Schools' Trust.[36]

In 2013, the Edmund Rice Schools' Trust floated a proposal for the school to take control of a planned new education building in Carrigaline, Co. Cork.[27]

As of January 2019, CBC had over 1000 students in the college, with over 900 at Secondary Level, and approximately 150 at Primary Level in the Preparatory School.[2] The principal of the college (both secondary and preparatory) is Mr. David Lordon.[1]

In December 2024, a planning objection lodged against a large-scale expansion of the school by a businessman who owned three townhouses adjacent to the school, was withdrawn. The individual had previously lodged an objection against a larger scale version of the proposed development, costed at €12.5 million, in 2020.[37][38][39] While planning permission had been granted for this development in 2020, a review by the board of management and the Edmund Rice Schools' Trust deemed it to be not commercially viable.[40][41][42]

Extracurricular activities

[edit]
CBC rugby team at Sanix World Rugby Youth Tournament, Global Arena, 2006

The school has been described by the Irish Independent as one of Cork's "rugby union nurseries" and as having "one of Ireland's oldest and most successful established rugby teams". They have won the Munster Schools' Senior Cup thirty times, winning its first title in 1909 (where they defeated Rockwell College).[37][43][44][45][46][30] The most recent Senior Cup title was in 2020, when the title was "shared" with Presentation Brothers College.[47] CBC also won the 2016 title after defeating Crescent College in the final.[48]

The college's main rivals are Presentation Brothers College, Cork (as the two main fee paying all-boys schools in Cork, both share similar histories, student bases, and sporting and academic traditions). In 2024, CBC Cork lost both the Junior and Senior Cup finals to PBC Cork.[49] Former Munster Rugby centre, Cian Bohane, went on to claim that both schools provided a "seamless transition" to professional rugby.[50] One noted meeting of this pair occurred in 1974, when 'Christians' defeated a 'Pres' team featuring Moss Finn 9-6, sealing CBC Cork's four-in-a-row win of the Cup.[51] In Where Miracles Happen: The Story of Thomond Park, they are noted for dominating these tournaments for most of the 20th century, regularly meeting each other in cup finals.[52] In 1999, the school won its third Senior Cup in a row, defeating Glenstal Abbey.[53] It is the only school to have attained two four-in-row feats in the competition.[54] In 2024, the school also defeated PBC Cork to win the Munster 'Senior B' Barry Cup.[55] In 2021, the Senior Cup was named after former Munster Rugby CEO and past pupil, Garrett Fitzgerald.[56] The school has also played matches against the Methodist College, Belfast, in the past.[57]

The school has produced numerous Irish Rugby internationals, with some of its earliest, among whom were Harry Jack and Vincent McNamara, predating the First World War.[58] David J. Lane, a past pupil, played for Ireland during the Inter-War period.[59] Jimmy McCarthy, regarded contemporaneously as one of Munster and Ireland's greatest-ever rugby players, was also a product of the school.[60][61] Paul Anthony Burke, a past pupil, played for Ireland in the 1990s and 2000s.[62] In 2019, the Sunday Independent referred to the school, along with PBC Cork, Belvedere, and Clongowes, as "bulk providers of raw material" for Irish rugby.[63] Past pupils have also played for the British & Irish Lions.[64]

In 1955, Old Christians RFC was founded to provide a sporting and social outlet for past pupils. Regarded as a literal "old boys club" until the 1970s, membership of the rugby club is also open to non-past pupils.[65]

As described by the Rugby Paper UK, the school's past pupils have generated "countless stalwarts" for the Munster Rugby squad.[46] In the 21st century, this has included (among others) Darragh Hurley, Tomás O'Leary[66] (in 2023, O'Leary was appointed to lead the school's Junior Rugby coaching team),[67][68] Billy Holland,[69] Stephen Archer,[70] Liam Coombes,[71] Alex McHenry,[72] Ross Noonan,[73] Mark Donnelly,[74] John William Ryan,[75] Cian Hurley,[76] Frank Murphy,[77] Ivan Dineen,[78] Duncan Williams,[79] Scott Buckley,[80] Simon Zebo (who attended both CBC Cork and PBC Cork),[81] James Coughlan[82] and Donncha O'Callaghan.[83][84] In August 2024, past pupil and former Munster Rugby player, Rory Burke, died unexpectedly at the age of 30.[85][86] The school's Past Pupils' Union awards rugby union honours caps to notable players.[87][54]

Former Munster Rugby player and New Zealand 'All Blacks' international, Jason Holland, has served as a member of the school's rugby coaching team.[5][88] In 2024, former Munster Rugby out-half, Jonny Holland, was appointed as the school's rugby performance director.[89][90] In 2023, the Irish Independent stated that the facilities at the school's Lansdowne Sports Complex "are widely regarded as among the best in the country."[67]

The school also participates in other extracurricular activities, including debating,[91] charitable activities and basketball.[92] The school also participates in other sports, including soccer (association football) and GAA (Gaelic football and hurling) - with CBC winning the Junior Cup for soccer in 2003 and 2008 (Premier League and Irish international soccer player, David Meyler, played with the school during this period),[93] and reaching the final of the Dr. Harty Cup (hurling) in 2019, doing so for the first time in 101 years.[94][95] The school contributed a total 16 players and 2 coaches to Cork GAA's All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship bid in 2021, including Robbie Cotter, Padraig Power, Jack Cahalane, Eoin Downey, Robert Downey, Robbie O’Flynn, Shane Barrett, Billy Hennessy and James O’Flynn.[96] After establishing a presence in soccer, the school won its first FAI Schools Munster Championship in 2023.[97]

The school won the 1984 Golfing Union of Ireland's Irish Inter-School's Golf Championship.[98]

Through several fundraising efforts, including the annual Christmas appeal, CBC supports charities including SHARE, Saint Vincent de Paul, HOPE, Trócaire and Concern.[citation needed] Among the school's charitable activities is the "Zambia Immersion Project", which involves students travelling to Zambia to observe and assist with development work.[2][99]

Notable alumni

[edit]

References

[edit]
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