Christian Brothers College, Monkstown Park | |
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Location | |
Monkstown, County Dublin Ireland |
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Coordinates | 53°17′24″N 6°08′55″W / 53.289951°N 6.148573°WCoordinates: 53°17′24″N 6°08′55″W / 53.289951°N 6.148573°W |
Information | |
Motto | "Certa Bonum Certamen" (Latin for Fight the Good Fight) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1856 |
Sister school | Christian Brothers College, Cork |
President | Mr. T. O'Reilly |
Principal | Dr. Gerry Berry (Senior School) |
Principal | Mr. D Molloy (Junior School) |
Staff | 45 Teachers, 10 Ancillary (Senior) 8 Teachers, 8 Support (Junior) |
Age | 5 to 18 |
Number of students | 525 (Senior School) 200 (Junior School) |
Colour(s) | Red, yellow and black |
Sports | Rugby, athletics |
Religious Order | Christian Brothers |
Website | cbcmonkstown.ie |
Christian Brothers College, Monkstown Park (or C.B.C. Monkstown Park) is a private fee-paying Catholic school and Independent Junior school, founded in 1856 in Monkstown, Dún Laoghaire, County Dublin, Ireland. The school fees are approximately €4,450 per annum. The college arrived at Monkstown Park in 1950 from Eblana Avenue in Dún Laoghaire via a short stint on Tivoli Road. It is in its 66th academic year of existence at Monkstown Park, the 159th overall.
The school motto is "Certa Bonum Certamen" or "fight the good fight" and the school colours are red, black and yellow. Monkstown has a sister school in Cork, Christians (CBC Cork) also founded by the Christian Brothers, both schools share the same colours of red, yellow and black and other traditions such as the motto. Recently Monkstown was 'twinned' with St. Patrick's College in Sri Lanka.
On 1 January 1856, the Congregation of Christian Brothers opened a school at Eblana Avenue in Dún Laoghaire (Kingstown as it was known then). The site was provided by Charles Kennedy, a businessman. Brother Alphonsus Hoope was appointed as superior of the school.
This was just ten years after the Great Famine, and emigration was rife. The school was called St Michaels Christian Brothers School, and initially educated mainly poor boys from the area. Kingstown during the 19th century was rapidly expanding with the harbour town seeing the addition of the piers and the Dublin and Kingstown Railway opening 20 years before the school.
Hoope arranged for two rooms for teaching, which had to be expanded after three weeks to three due to demand. Within two years, a building housing 400 students was built on the site. The school was financed from "voluntary subscriptions, solicited and collected by the Brothers". The Brothers residence of the time was located behind the main school building. There were 6 Brothers living on the school grounds, a building separate from the main school block. The school premises was valued in 1859 at £60.