Gormanston College

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Gormanston College

Franciscan College Gormanston is a Catholic school in East Meath, Ireland, operated and managed by the Irish province of the Order of the Friars Minor. The college operates under the trusteeship of the Minister Provincial and Definitory of the Franciscan Province of Ireland. In September 2014 the school will join the free school scheme.

In keeping with the centuries-old tradition of education not only by means of formal education, Franciscan College Gormanstom seeks to create an ambience within which the students live, study, pray and socialise in close proximity to the Franciscan community

The college is situated in East Meath and is approximately 32 kilometres (20 miles) north of Dublin City.

The student body numbers 250 approx and includes students from abroad, a dedicated team of qualified teachers also work as deans of residence providing additional educational tuition during evening study. Smaller size classes allow for excellent teaching and learning.

The college offers boarding and day facilities. Boarding at Gormanston is a mixture of five day and seven day boarding options for boys. Girls are admitted and welcome to the school as day students. International students must have an Irish contact either through an Agency or Guardianship.

The college ethos strives to direct students towards the values of mutual respect, social awareness and a reverence for God and Gospel values.. Gormanston College is a public, coeducational catholic secondary school under the trusteeship of the Franciscan Province of Ireland. The College is located at Gormanston Castle (built 1789), near Gormanston, County Meath, about 32 kilometres (20 mi) north of Dublin, Ireland.

The college motto is Dei Gloriae, Hiberniae Honori which translates To the glory of God and the honour of Ireland.

College grounds

The college consists mainly one building and is attached to the residential castle. The grounds, straddling County Meath and County Dublin, contain a river, a mature wood and a small 9-hole golf course. The main approach avenue scrolls through a wood of selected trees. There are several playing fields, in two different locations but contiguous with the college. The college and grounds are located between the Dublin - Belfast motorway and the old main Dublin - Drogheda road. The eastern face of Gormanston Castle looks to the sea, down a long straight field, known as "Cromwells Avenue". One of the most remarkable features of the estate is the yew walk, a foliage enclosed triangular area that dates back some hundreds of years, and leads down to the graveyard, where several of the Order, both priests and nuns, as well as some students, are buried. The old coach road from Dublin to Belfast runs alongside the eastern college boundary walls.[citation needed]

History

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The apostolate of education has been a core ministry throughout the 800-year history of the Franciscan Order. Prior to the Reformation schools attached to the local Franciscan abbey/friary were a common feature of Franciscan ministry. With the closure of the monasteries in the reign of Henry VIII this apostolate came to an abrupt end. The gradual relaxation of the Penal Laws saw a re-structuring of the Order in Ireland and the opening of a number of schools, notably in Clonmel and Athlone.

The ministry of education carried out in Gormanston has its immediate roots in the Seraphic College opened at Capranica 50k North of the city of Rome in 1883. Originally intended as a training college for aspirants to the Franciscan Order it was decided to transfer the college to Multyfarnham Abbey Co. Westmeath in 1896 where it was to evolve into a secondary school. The new college dedicated to St. Louis was opened in 1899. By the 1940s Multyfarnham in size and location was deemed no longer adequate by the Order.

The Order had purchased the Gormanston Estate in 1947 and its proximity to Dublin made it an ideal and accessible location for a modern college. The first boarders were received in Gormanston in 1954 and the new college was opened in 1956. The first boarding students were received in 1954 and the new college was opened in 1957.[1] The first students graduated from the College in 1957, a number of whom returned to become rectors at the College, Pat McSweeney OFM, Bob Doyle OFM, Paddy "Paddy" Timothy OFM.

Prior to the establishment of the school, Gormanston Castle and demesne had been in the possession of the Preston family who have been Viscounts Gormanston since the fourteenth century.The current principal of Gormanston College is Dermot Lavin.

In 2014, the school elected to enter the Free Education scheme, previous to that they had been a fee paying school. Fees are still charged for boarders.

Sex abuse scandal

See also: Ronald Bennett

In July 2006 Father Ronald Bennett, a former spiritual adviser, sports master and bursar of the college, pleaded guilty to the indecent assault of three boarders and one day pupil between 1974 and 1981.[2] He was initially given to a five-year suspended sentence.[3] On appeal the sentence was increased to 2½ years imprisonment and 2½ years suspended.[4]

During the court hearings it emerged that the college authorities had been informed of the allegations at the time but despite promises to take action to prevent a recurrence of the abuse they had done nothing.[5] This was confirmed by former pupil Dr. Richard Lanigan in a letter to the Irish Independent in March 2007.[6]

At the Celebrations of the Diamond Jubilee of the school on 23rd October 2014,[7] the Minister Provincial of the Franciscans in Ireland, Fr Hugh McKenna, said during mass that the order must acknowledge the 'shameful reality' that they had failed those students abused by Ronald Bennett.

'On behalf of the Franciscan Order I want to apologise unreservedly to each and every survivor for the pain and harm inflicted on those who suffered abuse while under the care of the friars.'

'I apologise for the breach of trust and the suffering victims and their families endured,' he said. 'I also know that no apology of mine can ever be sufficient. I acknowledge with deep shame that the Franciscan Order failed you.'[8]

Sport

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. A golf course, a Six-Lane 400 meter race track, an indoor sports complex with four multipurpose sports courts, a 25 Yard Indoor Swimming Pool and many other sports facilities are available in the College. The school takes part in a wide range of sports such as GAA, soccer, rugby, tennis, badminton and sailing.[9] In recent years the school has had some success in GAA winning the senior D Leinster title in 2014 and in rugby winning the North Dublin Junior league in 2012.

Other functions

During the school holidays the college plays host to various activities, including the Irish beekeepers' summer school and the Stageworks Ireland Drama summer school. It also plays host to The National Basketball Camp that has been running for the last 32 years. The "Gormanston Camp" as it is now known moved from Dungarvan 5 years ago and hosts basketball players from all over the country. [10]

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. http://www.gormanstoncollege.ie/Franciscan_Community.html
  2. "Priest Admits 1970s Abuse at Gormanston", Irish Independent, 5 July 2006. (accessed 2008-07-07)
  3. "Priest gets suspended term for child abuse", RTÉ News, 26 July 2006. (accessed 2008-07-07)
  4. "Court increases priest's prison sentence", RTÉ News, 5 March 2007. (accessed 2008-07-07)
  5. "Management aware of abuse but did not remove priest", Irish Times, 5 July 1976. (accessed 2008-07-07)
  6. "Dignity of a sex predator", Irish Independent, 14 March 2007. (accessed 2008-07-07)
  7. "Gormanston College Celebrates Diamond Jubilee", North County Leader, 28 October 2014. (accessed 2015-04-09)
  8. ″Franciscans issue apology for abuse at Gormanston″, Drogheda Independent, 1 November 2014. (accessed 2015-04-09)
  9. "Sports", Gormanston College website. (accessed 2015-04-09)
  10. Federation of Irish Beekeepers' Associations Website (accessed 2008-07-06)

External links