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Saint Flannan's College Coláiste Fhlannáin Naofa Collegium Sancti Flannani | |
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![]() Crest of the college(Top) | |
Location | |
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Information | |
Patron saint(s) | Saint Flannan |
Established | 1846; 179 years ago (1846) |
President | Rev. Joe McMahon |
Principal | Rev. Ignatius McCormack[1] |
Chaplain | Rev. Damien Nolan |
Staff | 85 (2011) |
Number of students | c. 1200 |
Website | www |
View of the front of the College |
Saint Flannan's College is an Irish co-educationalsecondary school located inEnnis,County Clare, which takes its name from the 7th century patron saint of theDál gCais. It was formerly an all-boysboarding school; however, the first girls' class was entered in 2002 and in 2005 the boarding school was closed. In 2003 an extension which added over 20 new rooms to thecollege was completed. A measure of the expansion that has taken place over the past thirty years is that in 1962, there were some 370 pupils, 140 of whom were day boys. Only 37 teachers were in attendance. By 2004, enrollment had risen to more than 1,001 students. Staff numbers had risen to 60. In September 2002, co-ed classes were introduced in First Year. In September 2003, a new wing containing extensive new facilities was opened. In the 2010–11 school year there were 1,206 students.
In 1846, theDiocese of Killaloe lent its prestige and patronage to the private academy conducted at Springfield House,Ennis, by a Mr Fitzsimons. Fortified by diocesan support, the school would henceforth function as both a diocesan seminary and as a day and boarding school forCatholic boys. Under this arrangement, the Springfield House school flourished, and by the early 1850s was already enticing pupils away from Erasmus Smith College, College Road. Springfield pupils were conspicuously successful in obtaining scholarships to the Queen's Colleges atGalway andCork (nowNUI Galway andUniversity College Cork). In 1859, Fitzsimons added a new wing to the college in order to cater for the increased number of students. The same year, Springfield affiliated to the newly establishedUniversity of London as a preparatory college. In 1862, financial difficulties caused Fitzsimons to terminate his connection with Springfield, and under his successor the college changed direction sharply. The affiliation with the University of London was dropped for one with Newman'sCatholic University in Dublin. Fitzsimons embarked on a new career inArgentina, where within the space of a few years he set up four schools. He died there in 1871 during an outbreak ofyellow fever.[citation needed]
In 1865 the diocese broke with Springfield altogether and set up a diocesan college completely under its control at #12 Bindon Street, now a solicitor's office, and soon after became known as St. Flannan's Literary Institute, under a clericalheadmaster, known for the first time as a president. The following year, the institute was able to acquire the Springfield premises after the school there closed. After a comparatively short interval, a search was begun to find a site on which a larger college campus could be developed. Work finally began in 1879 on land acquired on the Limerick Road, and the college was built to a rather severe neo-Gothic design. Financial problems occasioned by the bankruptcy of the builder led to alterations in the plans, and some of the finishing touches were postponed, never to be completed. Visitors to the college are often shown such features as the plain uncarved label stops around theGothic windows and theClock Tower, with no clock — all now part of the fabric of college tradition.[citation needed]
Perhaps the most famous president of the college was Canon William Kennedy, head of St. Flannan's between 1919 and 1932. During the Anglo-Irish War, the college was a hotbed of separatist sentiment, from where the Canon personally organised the collection of the famous Dáil Loan in Clare. Still preserved in the college are letters from bothÉamon de Valera andMichael Collins in connection with this undertaking. Canon Kennedy was arrested in July 1921 by British forces and interned onBere Island. The early decades of the new state were grim as only limited funding was available for secondary education, and most costs had to be met out from the college's resources alone, but some curriculum development did take place. In 1937, for example, Physics was introduced as a subject for theLeaving Certificate, remaining for many years the only science subject available at that level.
The measure of the expansion that has taken place over the past thirty years is considerable; in 1962 there were some 370 pupils in St. Flannan's (140 of whom were day boys) and only 17 teachers. By 2004, the numbers had risen to more than 1,000 students and staff numbers had risen to 66. In September 2002, Coed classes were introduced in First Year. In September 2003, a new wing containing new facilities was opened.[2] The college experienced very severe flooding in November 2009: much of the college grounds was submerged, and water breached the perimeter wall because of a small stream that runs underneath the college.[3]
St Flannan's was ranked third in Ireland according to one of the most comprehensive league tables, published inThe Irish Times, to date. The table was compiled by a research team at theUniversity of Ulster and the Kemmy Business School at theUniversity of Limerick in 2009.[4]
James is now in his 23rd year teaching Business Studies at St. Flannans, Ennis, and once again he is embroiled in the quest for Harty Cup honours as one of the college's coaches and in recent years the Ennis college have achieved great success.
52°50′01″N8°59′00″W / 52.8336°N 8.9834°W /52.8336; -8.9834