*** Welcome to piglix ***

Robert Corbet Singleton


Robert Corbet Singleton was Warden of St. Columba’s College, Dublin, subsequently First Warden of St. Peter’s College, Radley, and a noted writer and translator of hymns. He was born on 9 October 1810 in Ireland and died on 7 February 1881 in York, England.

Singleton was the second son of Francis Corbet of County Adare, Meath. He followed his father in taking the name Corbet Singleton.

R.C. Singleton was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, graduating with a BA in 1830, and awarded his MA in 1833.

Singleton was a teacher of mathematics, he loved music and Latin. On the best of terms with William Sewell, he was instrumental in setting up St Columba’s College, Stackallan, near Dublin, and became its first Warden when the college opened in 1843, although owing to a subsequent dispute were never recognised as founders.Also on the staff, soon afterwards, at St Columba’s, was music master Edwin Monk with whom Singleton was subsequently to work also at Radley; the two of them still later collaborating in the making of a hymnal at York more than two decades later.

In 1850 Singleton noted in his diary that the school's boys were "Bold, manly and vigorous at their games...very proud of their college." Singleton expalained that to be a successful teacher a man "must be something of a gentleman...it would never do...to induce the boys to look down on him." Perhaps his brother too was Samuel Singleton, elected a member of Common Room in 1848. A stickler for truth and honesty Singleton was an exacting employer, finding it hard to recruit staff.

Singleton’s resignation from St Columba’s in 1846 followed a controversy after he insisted on a rigorous regime of fasting for the boys.

Singleton moved to Oxford where he was admitted in 1847 to Trinity College. With William Sewell, who had supported him at St Columba’s, he was to become co-founder of St Peter’s College, Radley, being appointed the first Warden of Radley on 9 June 1847.


...
Wikipedia

...