Marist College Ashgrove

Marist College Ashgrove

Main entrance
Latin: Viriliter Age
Act Courageously[1]
Location
Ashgrove, Queensland
 Australia
Coordinates 27°26′25″S 152°58′41″E / 27.440257°S 152.977967°E / -27.440257; 152.977967Coordinates: 27°26′25″S 152°58′41″E / 27.440257°S 152.977967°E / -27.440257; 152.977967
Information
Type Private, Secondary, Day and Boarding
Denomination Roman Catholic
(Marist Brothers)
Established 1940[1]
Headmaster Peter McLoughlin
Chaplain Fr. Jim Hargrave
Staff ~137[1]
Years offered 512[1]
Gender Boys
Enrolment ~1600
Colour(s) Royal blue and Gold         
Website www.marash.qld.edu.au

Marist College Ashgrove is a Roman Catholic day and boarding school for boys, located in Ashgrove, a northern suburb of Brisbane, Australia. The college has a primary school for students in grades 5 to 6, and a high school for students in grades 7 to 12.[1]

History

The "Tower Block" was the first and still remains the prominent building on the College campus:

A Castle in the Woods

Shortly afterwards another building dominated the district. It was St. Jude's Seminary, where the Mission of the Most Holy Eucharist was established in 1929-30. On the 40-acre estate of the late Dr. Taylor, next to Glenlyon, on the first slopes leading to the heavily timbered mountains that provide a scenic background for Ashgrove and Enoggera, a monastery that might have been built in the storied era of mediaeval times was set down in Australian bush surroundings. Such is the architect's art that St. Jude's, where missionaries are trained for the Philippines, toned into its surroundings, and provided a spiritual atmosphere for a modern suburb. This 'beautiful building, semi Gothic in inspiration, is approached by a bridge that might have spanned the moat of some warring baron's castle instead of the gentle meandering Enoggera Creek. The bridge alone cost more than £1000. St. Jude's, old in spirit but young in structure, communicates its dignity and modernity to the new suburb where hundreds of new houses have sprung up. [2]

Campus

The college is situated on a 26 hectare campus and includes such facilities as:

- Long Jump/Triple Jump training track - Shotput/Discuss/Javelin stations

Houses

In 1993, the House system was established. There are eight houses at Marist College Ashgrove;

Boarding school

Marist College Ashgrove also offers a Boarding School catering for students from grades 6 to 12. The college currently caters for nearly 250 boarders. The boarding community includes many students from the Greater Brisbane Region and South-East Queensland, along with many country students from Outback Queensland and regional Australia. International students also board from as far away as Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and Saudi Arabia.

Crest & motto

The crest of the college was based on the design of the crest of St Joseph's College at Hunters Hill, Sydney. The four quadrants of the shield are filled with: the Marist Monogram, with its twelve stars, in the top left, the Southern Cross in the top right, the MCA logo in the bottom left and the lamp and book representing learning, in the bottom left.

The motto traditionally displayed above the crest, Viriliter Age (Act manfully), was adopted in 1957 and is translated from Latin.

Notable alumni

2008 Blue and Gold Ball

The College holds an annual "Blue and Gold" ball with the college's premier Big Band being the only regular performance. In 2008, Australian jazz musician James Morrison performed with the big band along with his own band.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Annual Report 2011" (PDF). Marist College Ashgrove. 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-11-12. Retrieved 2012-11-12.
  2. "The Suburban Development of Brisbane.". The Courier-Mail (Brisbane: National Library of Australia). 22 January 1936. p. 5. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  3. Marriner, Cosima (April 27, 2007). "It's private - the school he wants to forget". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 1.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.