Sacred Heart College (Adelaide)

This article is about the co-educational senior school in Somerton Park. For the all-boys middle school, see Sacred Heart College Middle School.
Sacred Heart College

Latin: Virtus Ubique Vincit
("Courage Conquers All")
Location
Somerton Park, SA
Australia
Coordinates 34°59′44″S 138°31′12″E / 34.99556°S 138.52000°E / -34.99556; 138.52000Coordinates: 34°59′44″S 138°31′12″E / 34.99556°S 138.52000°E / -34.99556; 138.52000
Information
Type Independent, Day & Boarding
Denomination Roman Catholic
(Marist)
Established 1897
Sister school Sacred Heart College Middle School
Marymount College for girls
Principal Steve Byrne
Years 10-12[1]
Gender Co-educational
Enrolment ~1000
Colour(s) Dark Blue and Light Blue         
Slogan "Educating in a spirit of audacity and hope"
Athletics SAAS
Affiliations Association of Marist Schools of Australia
Website www.shcs.sa.edu.au

Sacred Heart College is an Australian Catholic school teaching in the Marist tradition in the Adelaide beachside suburbs of Somerton Park, South Australia and Mitchell Park. The college is a coeducational school from Years 10 to 12.

Sacred Heart is known for its Australian rules football teams, cultivating thorough athletes since its establishment. It has an annual Intercollegiate match against its cross-town rival, Rostrevor College, which is a notable event on the South Australian sports calendar.

The school also has an annual exchange with Assumption College in Kilmore, Victoria which entails music and performing arts performances, debating, a social and several sporting competitions.

History

Paringa Hall, 1933

In 1897 the Marist Brothers of Adelaide were formally invited by Archbishop John O'Reily to establish an all-boys school in Port Adelaide. The first principal of the school was Brother Stephen DeBourg- the college recognising his achievements through the dedication of the Brother Stephen DeBourg Performing Arts Centre in 2008.

Due to the increasing popularity of the school, Sacred Heart High was relocated to the current site at Somerton Park; it was subsequent to two previous changes in location within the first ten years of its commencement. In 1914 the Marist Brothers had acquired Paringa Hall in Somerton Park, the residence of a wealthy pastoralist James Francis Cudmore who had died in 1912. The school was renamed Sacred Heart College and established extensive facilities for its period as well as the notable college chapel. During its erection the college provided schooling for day students and boarders from Years 4 to Leaving Honours.

College chapel shortly after its completion, 1924

In 1977 Sacred Heart College became part of the SW Region scheme and evolved into a senior college catering for the final three years of study. Today, Sacred Heart College Senior is a coeducational senior college for approximately 1,000 students in Years 10 – 12 and continuously upholds the largest graduating class in South Australia.

Campus

The college is situated on three grounds in the suburb of Somerton Park on Brighton Road, 13 kilometres from the Adelaide CBD. The campus' facilities consist of three ovals, nine tennis courts, three basketball courts, a hockey pitch and seven cricket nets.

The school has seen extensive redevelopments of its facilities. This has constituted the development of the Marcellin Learning Centre and the Brother Stephen DeBorgue Performing Arts Centre which includes music rooms and a multifunctional arts centre. The college is undertaking plans to overhaul Sacred Heart College's War Memorial Oval; the redevelopments which are due to conclude in 2014/15 will house classrooms, a gymnasium, change rooms and a 1000-seat assembly hall.

The campus is most widely recognised[2] for its stately heritage architecture. Central to the college is "Paringa Hall", named as such to recognise the Cudmore family's first largest sheep station in the Riverland. It has been defined as one of South Australia's most outstanding late 19th-century family homes remaining upstanding. Designed by a previous Mayor of Adelaide and notable architect, engineer and businessman Edmund William Wright, also noted for designing the Adelaide Town Hall and Parliament House, Adelaide, the building's opulence speaks of great wealth.[3]

Located east of the campus is the Sacred Heart Memorial Chapel, opened and blessed in 1924 as a memorial to the Old Collegians who lost their lives in the First World War. The college also embodies heritage structures located throughout the college, including the century old Score Board and Memorial Entrance.

Also a part of the college campus includes a technology centre and St Paul's which is currently in redevelopment, each located within the school precinct.

House system

As with many schools, Sacred Heart College uses a house system through which students participate in intra-school competitions and activities.

The college currently has ten houses:

         Camara          Chisholm          Franklin          Joseph          Mackillop
         Marcellin          Mitchell          Newman          Polding          Teresa

Notable alumni

AFL footballers

Feeder schools

Controversy

The college came to media attention in August 2013 when it was reported that Cory Gregson, a player within its first XVIII was not permitted to make his League debut with the Glenelg Football Club due to him being required to play in an inter-school game against Rostrevor College.[9]

See also

References

  1. "Sacred Heart College". Australian Boarding Schools' Association. Retrieved 4 May 2009.
  2. The Mail. 15 Dec 1928, Trove
  3. Keith Conlon, Postcards
  4. Robert, Rice (2001). "Some reflections on the contributions of Matthew Beovich and James Gleeson to the Second Vatican Council". Australasian Catholic Record. 78 (1): 46–61.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The ties that bind". The Southern Cross. Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide. 1 October 2009.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Goldsmith, David (16 September 2009). "Illustrious company for Sacred Heart old scholars". Guardian Messenger.
  7. "1 - Corey Maynard". BryantBulldogs.com. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  8. McNicol, Adam (4 April 2015). "Final Cats side v Hawks". geelongcats.com.au. Telstra Media. Archived from the original on 4 April 2015. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
  9. Morgan, Kym (7 August 2013). "No Hard Feelings From Club as College Lays Claim to Star". Guardian Messenger. p. 52. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.