St Paul's College, Ballarat

St Paul's College

Latin: Labor Nobilitat
Work Ennobles
Address
113-115 Lydiard Street North, Ballarat (1948-1986)
200 Victoria Street, Ballarat East (1987-1994)

Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, 3350
Coordinates 37°33′33″S 143°51′29″E / 37.559051°S 143.858032°E / -37.559051; 143.858032Coordinates: 37°33′33″S 143°51′29″E / 37.559051°S 143.858032°E / -37.559051; 143.85803237°33′31″S 143°53′14″E / 37.558719°S 143.887130°E / -37.558719; 143.887130
Information
Type Independent, single-sex, day school
Denomination Roman Catholic, Christian Brothers
Patron saint(s) St Paul
Established 1948
Founder Bishop James O'Connor
Closed 1994
Years offered 7 - 12
Gender Male
Colour(s) Gold, Navy, Light Blue
              
Feeder to St Martin's In the Pines
Website https://stpauls.damascus.vic.edu.au

St Paul's College, formerly St Paul's Technical College and St Paul's Technical School, was a Catholic boys school in Ballarat.[1]

History

In 1948 the Bishop of Ballarat, Most Reverend James O'Collins established St Paul's Technical College, inviting the Christian Brothers to continue their work for boys through the provision of technical education.

In 1960 Miss Alice Fanning bequeathed property in Mt Clear to the Sisters of Mercy. In 1967 the land was developed for a senior school for girls from Sacred Heart College, named St Martin's in the Pines. The school became co-educational in 1988, with many boys in the senior years of St Paul's attending St Martin's in the Pines.[2][3]

In 1987 the school moved from Lydiard Street's Ludbrook House to the former Ballarat Orphanage on Victoria Street.

In 1995 the College amalgamated with Sacred Heart College and St Martin's in the Pines to form Damascus College Ballarat.[1]

Student abuse scandals

In 2014 St Paul's was named on Ballarat’s child sexual abuse survivors’ group submission to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, along with other Christian Brothers Schools St Patrick's College, St Joseph's College and Emmanuel College. Also named were De La Salle College and Geelong Grammar School.[4]

Notable alumni

Principals

Period Name
1948? Br Cooke[8]
?? Br Kent
19731976 Br Bernard John Scott[9]
1976? Br F. D. McGuane
19831990 Br Francis Thomas Hennessy [10]
19901993 Br John O’Halloran[11]
1994 Br Laurie Goodison [11]

References

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