Trisha Shetty (Editor)

St. Mary's Knockbeg College

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Funding type
  
Public

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Phone
  
+353 59 914 2127

Number of students
  
400

Classroom
  
20

Religious affiliation(s)
  
Christian

Established
  
1793

Province
  
Leinster

Founded
  
1793

Colors
  
White, Blue

St. Mary's Knockbeg College

Motto
  
Motto:   Recissa Vegetior Assurgit "That what has been cut back will grow stronger"

Oversight
  
Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin

Address
  
Knockbeg, Co. Carlow, Ireland

Similar
  
St Marys Academy CBS, St Leo's College, Presentat College Carlow, Carlow College, Carlow Vocational School

St. Mary's Knockbeg College (Irish: Coláiste Muire Cnoc Beag) is a Roman Catholic, all-boys secondary school located on the Laois/Carlow border in Ireland, approximately 3 km from both Carlow town and Graiguecullen, Co. Laois. A former seminary school for the diocese of Kildare and Leighlin, it was founded in 1793. Exclusively a boarding school until the 1980s, it now accommodates only day-pupils; the boarding school having closed down in June 2011. Knockbeg College celebrated its bicentenary in 1993.
Knockbeg won the All-Ireland College's Senior Football Championship in 2005, under the guidance of former Laois GAA football captain and current teacher, Chris Conway.
In 2006, Knockbeg were the victors of the Thomas Crosbie Holdings All Ireland Quiz Championship, bringing All-Ireland success to the college twice in two years, and were crowned All-Ireland German Debating Champions in 2008.

Contents

History

St Mary's Knockbeg College is one of the oldest secondary schools in Ireland, located on the Laois/Carlow border. It traces its origins back to 1793 when a lay school for boys was established in St.Patrick's College, Carlow in conjunction with the seminary there. In 1847 it was decided that the young pupils in the school should come out to Knockbeg, which had been a gentry estate on the banks of the River Barrow before being purchased by the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin, in 1892 all lay students were moved to Knockbeg. The initial school had about 40 pupils but the numbers grew as all the lay pupils from St Patrick's transferred out. In 1898 the school became the official junior seminary for the diocese. To this day the aim of the college is to offer a holistic Catholic education. Through the years the boarding numbers in the school built up to the around 160 mark and has since increased in the 1980s when Day-Boys were taken in. At present, there are well over 350 pupils attending the school.

Sports

Knockbeg College has a long sporting tradition, widely recognised throughout Ireland. In 2005, Knockbeg claimed the Leinster Senior Football College's title after a gap over 50 years. Following this, they went on to claim the Hogan Cup for the first time in their history. Knockbeg has produced many quality footballers throughout the years, playing inter-county football for their respective counties. Knockbeg's hurling and basketball teams have also achieved moderate success over the years. Its athletics team is growing and developing to be one of the most successful athletic schools in the country in track and field and cross country.

This long history of sport has led many students to go on to play for the Laois GAA football team, this includes past students:

  • Donie Brennan
  • Chris Conway
  • Donal Kingston
  • Brian McDonald
  • Ross Munnelly
  • Rory Stapleton
  • Notable alumni

  • Colm Begley, former Australian Rules Footballer, who played for the Brisbane Lions and St Kilda Saints.
  • Rev. Dr. Matthew Cullen, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin (1927-1936).
  • Charles Flanagan, Fine Gael TD for Laois and currently Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade.
  • Lt.Col.Myles Keogh, second lieutenant of his unit in the papal army's Battalion of St. Patrick (1860-1862) who was made Knight of the Order of St. Gregory the Great by Pope Pius IX. He later became Captain of Company I, 7th U.S. Cavalry Regiment and was killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, 1876.
  • James Fintan Lalor, Irish revolutionary and writer, leading member of the Young Irelanders.
  • Paddy Lalor, former Fianna Fáil TD for Laois–Offaly, Minister for Industry and Commerce and M.E.P..
  • Rev. Dr. Patrick Lennon, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin (1967-1987).
  • Tom Daly (rugby union), current Rugby Union player, who plays for Leinster Rugby and captains the Ireland national rugby sevens team.
  • Tommy Murphy, former Laois footballer who was named in the midfield position in the GAA Football Team of the Millennium.
  • Kevin O'Higgins, Irish Nationalist and Pro-Treaty TD for Laois–Offaly, Minister for Home Affairs/Vice-President of the Executive Council in the first Dáil and founder of the Garda Síochána. Assassinated by the Irish Republican Army in 1927.
  • Frank O'Meara, Carlow-born Irish artist known for his Impressionist, plein air landscape painting (1853-1888). Some of his acclaimed paintings include: Old Woman Burning Leaves, Reverie and Old Mill at Grez.
  • Liam O'Neill, former Chairman of the Leinster Council and President of the Gaelic Athletic Association, 2012-2015.
  • William Hoey Kearney Redmond, Irish nationalist, land reform agitator and Irish Parliamentary Party MP for 34 years who died fighting in World War I.
  • Rev. Dr. Laurence Ryan, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin (1987-2002).
  • References

    St. Mary's Knockbeg College Wikipedia