St Joseph's Patrician College

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

St. Joseph's Patrician College
Location
Map
Nuns' Island, Galway, Ireland
Information
TypeSecondary school
Motto"Pro Deo et Patria"
Established1862
PrincipalJohn Madden
Colour(s)Blue and White
AffiliationCatholic
Websitewww.bish.ie

St. Joseph's Patrician College, often known as "The Bish", is a secondary school in the West Ireland city of Galway. Founded by the Patrician Brothers, a religious order, it has approximately 800 students on roll and, in recent years, has had success in a wide range of sporting activities including soccer, rugby, basketball, rowing, Gaelic games, athletics, and table tennis.

History[edit]

St Joseph's College (The Bish) was established in 1862 due to the absence of a Catholic Intermediate School for boys in the city. Bishop John McEvilly asked Brother Paul [who?] to open such a school and St. Joseph's Seminary was established at Nuns' Island in 1862. Due to the bishop's close association with the school, the seminary was generally referred to as "the bishop's school" and to this day is known as "The Bish." Publicising his new enterprise Bishop McEvilly wrote a pastoral [vague] in which he stated: "For many years we have had excellent schools for the lower orders at the Mercy Convent, Newtownsmith, and the Monastery School at Lombard St. The higher class of boys are catered for at St. Ignatius' College, the girls at the Dominican Convent. Now, at last, we happily have a school for the middle class at St. Joseph's Seminary, Nuns' Island."

When the school was established the word seminary had no ecclesiastical connotations[citation needed] and there was in fact a "Seminary For Young Ladies" further down Nuns' Island, by the 1930s the word had come to mean a college for the training of candidates for the priesthood,[citation needed] and at the express desire of Bishop Michael Browne the Brothers changed the name to "St. Joseph's College", and in the 1970s Bro. Valerian Whelan[who?] inserted the word Patrician in the title.

In 1899 a National School was opened to cater for the Junior Classes at the Seminary and it too came to be known as "The Bish". In 1930 the Brothers acquired the bonded store belonging to Persse's Distillery, renovated it and transferred the seventy Intermediate pupils across the road. The National School took over the rooms vacated on the original site and continued in operation until 1954 when it and "the Old Monastery School" were replaced by St. Patrick's, on Lombard Street.[1]

Extra curricular activities[edit]

Drama[edit]

Plays and talent shows are often performed annually by the students of St. Joseph's Patrician College.[citation needed]

Rowing[edit]

St Joseph's College Rowing Club was established in 1932, making its first competitive appearance against St. Patrick's Boat Club later that year in the Schoolboy Fours.[citation needed] It did not acquire its own boathouse until 1955, when the Menlo Emmet's donated their Woodquay premises to the school under the agreement it should never be used for anything but the development of rowing. The club was a dominant player in the Junior National Championships which had been established in 1964,[2] and has won a number of national championships in various grades.[citation needed]

Internationally, oarsmen from St. Joseph's College R.C. have also excelled,[tone] as a club competing at The British School Regatta, Ghent International Regatta, Henley Royal Regatta, and the Sydney International Rowing Regatta in March 2013. Many[who?] have represented Ireland on the international stage at all levels of competition from the Home International Regatta (Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales), to the Coupe de la Jeunesse (second level European Junior Championship) and the World Junior Championship. Alumni of the school have achieved even higher laurels following on from their experience gained on the Corrib, competing at the World U-23 Championships, World Senior Championships and the Olympic Games.[citation needed]

Rugby[edit]

In rugby, teams from the school have won 10 Connacht Schools Junior Cups (last in 1991) and 12 Connacht Schools Senior Cups (last in 1994).[citation needed]

Other titles include the U-14 Connacht Schools League (2010, 2012 2013), Junior Schools Connacht League (2010), Junior Schools City Cup (2012, 2013), Senior Schools Development Cup (2010, 2012), and U-17 Connacht Schools 7's (2012, 2013).[citation needed]

The Bish has been remarkably successful[tone] in producing quality rugby teams and players since the school was founded.[citation needed] Many players have represented played on representative teams provincially and nationally, at both under-age and senior level. Among these are Damian Browne, Andrew Browne and Darragh Leader, all of whom have played at senior level for local professional side Connacht Rugby. The Bish currently fields teams at all school age levels - Under 14, Junior and Senior. The U-14's compete in the Connacht U-14 Schools League, the Juniors partake in the Connacht Junior League, Junior Cup and City Cup and the Senior Team play in the U-18 Connacht Regional League as well as the Connacht Senior Development Cup.[citation needed]

Basketball[edit]

Basketball is also played.[3]

Notable alumni[edit]

Politics
Sport

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bish History
  2. ^ Irish Rowing Archives - list of Championships & winners
  3. ^ "Basketball". St. Joseph's Patrician College (The Bish). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  4. ^ "Séamus Brennan, TD". Department of Tourism, Culture and Sport. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Small, Daragh (24 March 2017). "The Bish are ready to be a force once again". Irish Independent. Retrieved 24 March 2017. ... that didn't deter Connacht's Andrew Browne, Darragh Leader and Ciaran Gaffney from attending in the past. Ex-Connacht lock Damien Browne also went there... Ireland international goalkeeper David Forde honed his skills at the Bish, as did the new president of the GPA and former Galway hurling captain David Collins; and esteemed Irish rower, and two-time Olympian, Neville Maxwell.
  6. ^ "Eamonn was a great sportsman". The Argus. 18 September 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  7. ^ "A rugby great who played for Connacht and country: Eamonn McGuire - Born: June 28th, 1939; Died: September 14th, 2013". The Irish Times. 30 November 2013. Archived from the original on 25 November 2018. McGuire began playing rugby at St Joseph's (the 'Bish') in Galway where he was selected for the Connacht Schools team and was a member of a team which won a Connacht Junior Cup in 1957.

53°16′21″N 9°03′29″W / 53.27256°N 9.05794°W / 53.27256; -9.05794