St Edmund's College, Canberra
St Edmund's College, Canberra is an independent, Catholic, secondary and primary school for boys, located in Griffith, a suburb of Canberra, in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), Australia.
St Edmund's College, Canberra | |
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Location | |
, | |
Coordinates | 35°19′22″S 149°08′43″E |
Information | |
Type | Independent secondary and primary school |
Motto | Latin: Christus Lux Mea (Christ is My Light) |
Religious affiliation(s) | |
Denomination | Catholicism |
Patron saint(s) | Edmund Ignatius Rice |
Established | 1954; 66 years ago (as St Edmund's War Memorial College) |
Founder | The Christian Brothers |
Principal | Joe Zavone |
Years offered | 4–12 |
Gender | Boys |
Campus | Griffith |
Colour(s) | Blue, white and gold |
Website | sec |
The college was established in 1954 by the Christian Brothers as St Edmund's War Memorial College. It was opened to meet the demand for a Catholic education school in the region and was the first Catholic secondary boys' college established in the ACT. St Edmund's College practises in the tradition of Edmund Ignatius Rice. The current principal of the college is Joe Zavone.
Students are placed into houses for sporting and other events. The current houses and colours are: Clancy (yellow), Treacy (dark blue), O'Brien (white), Haydon (red), Mulrooney (sky blue) and Rice (green).
The college song is "Edmund's to the Fore" (played to the tune of "Men of Harlech"), and the college hymn is "Christ Be Our Light" (by B. Farrell).
History
St Edmund's War Memorial College opened in 1954 as a Christian Brothers school in response to the needs of Catholic parents of the region. St. Edmund's was the first Catholic secondary boys' college established in Canberra.
Headmasters / principals
The St Edmund's College website lists the following people as headmasters / principals of the College:
- 1954–1956: P. L. McCarthy
- 1957–1959: E. C. Fields
- 1960–1965: N. T. Landener[1]
- 1966–1969: J. B. Darmody
- 1970–1978: G. D. Kerr
- 1979–1988: R. J. Wallace
- 1989–1994: J. P. O’Shea
- 1995–2004: C. J. Dwyer
- 2005–2008: C. X. Hayes
- 2009–2014: P. J. Fullagar
- 2015–2017: D. Lawler
- 2018–Present: J. Zavone
Rugby union
The college has won the Waratah Shield more than any other school (14 times) and was the defending champion in 2005, when schools from the ACT were no longer invited/permitted to participate by the organisers, the New South Wales Rugby Union.[2] The college has over 480 registered boys playing rugby union. St Edmund's College has a reputation for being one of the premier rugby schools in Australia, with Saia Fainga'a being the latest alumnus to represent Australia. The college also have always had a brilliant record in the local competition (ACTJRU) with many grand finals to their name across the different age groups.
Ancillary bodies
In reflecting the spirit of charity of Edmund Rice, St Edmund's College established the St Edmund's College Foundation with the aim of giving financial assistance to disadvantaged families to diminish the burden of educating their children and to provide them the opportunity of a quality education.[3]
The St Edmund's College Old Boys and Friends Association was established in 2015. Looking to take over where the original alumni group left off, the association is slightly different than the original alumni group, as it is focused on incorporating the college community as a whole. The association states that they would like to encourage all old boys and friends to remain involved in the college community, attend college activities or to just stay in touch or locate lost friends.[4] The association is run by a committee consisting of a president, a treasurer and up to six other members in charge of the website, organising events, and more. It draws on community support from individuals and businesses, as well as ongoing support from the college.
Notable alumni
Business
- John A. Bryant – President & CEO of the Kellogg's Corporation and Director of Macy's, Inc.
Academic
- Andrew John Robertson – Rhodes Scholar (1995)[5]
Politics and law
- John Barilaro MP – Member for Monaro and Deputy Premier of New South Wales
- Terence Higgins AO – former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory (2003–2013)
- Warren Snowdon MP – Member for Lingiari (since 2001); formerly the Member for Northern Territory (1987–1996; 1998–2001)
Media/performing
- Matthew Le Nevez – television actor
- Tommy Murphy – award-winning playwright
- Flip Simmons – theatre actor and singer[6]
Military and police
- John Lawler OAM, APM – former deputy commissioner of the Australian Federal Police and former chairman of the Australian Crime Commission
- Lieutenant General David Morrison AO – former Chief of Army and 2016 Australian of the Year
Religion
- Most Rev. Patrick Power – Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus of Canberra and Goulburn
Sport
- Finlay Bealham – Irish rugby union player for Ireland national rugby union team and Connacht Rugby
- Robbie Coleman – Australian rugby union footballer for the Brumbies
- Anthony Fainga'a – Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and the Brumbies
- Colby Fainga'a – Australian rugby union footballer for the Melbourne Rebels
- Saia Fainga'a – Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and the Brumbies
- Vili Fainga'a – rugby union footballer for the Tonga national rugby union team and former rugby league footballer for the Canberra Raiders and Melbourne Storm player
- David Furner – former professional rugby league footballer and coach for the Canberra Raiders and NSW State of Origin team
- Matt Giteau – former Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and the Brumbies
- George Gregan – former Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and Brumbies; the most-capped rugby union international of all time
- Matt Henjak – former Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and the Western Force
- Alex Jesaulenko – Australian rules football player[7]
- Nate Osborne – head coach of Major League Rugby's New Orleans Gold
- Matt Pini – former Australian rugby union footballer for the Wallabies and Italy
- Luke Priddis – Australian rugby league footballer for the Kangaroos, Penrith Panthers and St George-Illawarra Dragons
- Stephen Simmonds – Paralympic swimming medallist and disabled water ski world champion
- Tyrone Smith – former Australian rugby union footballer for the Brumbies and Tonga
- Ricky Stuart – former Australian dual-code rugby player, former coach of the Cronulla Sharks and NSW State of Origin team, current coach of the Canberra Raiders and winner of the 2016 Dally M Coach of the Year[8]
See also
References
- "Obituary: Brother Landener". Canberra Times. 21 September 1982. p. 6. Retrieved 12 June 2020 – via Trove.
- Sheehan, Paul (23 May 2005). "Boys' lesson in defeat, if not class". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
- "Foundation". St Edmunds College Canberra. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
- "About St Edmund's College Old Boys and Friends Association". St Edmund's College Old Boys and Friends Association. Retrieved 17 June 2017.
- "NSW Rhodes Scholars" Archived 15 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine — University of Sydney list, (retrieved 26 April 2007)
- http://stedmunds.realviewtechnologies.com/?iid=26347&startpage=page0000007 "Retrieved: June 2009"
- Vortex Newsletter 14 May 2008 (retrieved 7 August 2008)
- http://www.thefordhamcompany.com.au/ricky-stuart-dally-m-coach-year/