St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill

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St Joseph's College
Joeyshuntershill.jpg
Latin: In Meliora Contende
("Strive for better things")[1]
Location
Hunters Hill, New South Wales
Australia Australia
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Information
Type Private, Day & Boarding
Denomination Roman Catholic (Marist Brothers)
Established 1881[2]
Headmaster Mr Ross Tarlinton
Chaplain Rev. Fr Gavin Foster
Staff ~111[3]
Gender Boys
Enrolment ~1000 (7–12)[3]
Colour(s) Cerise [4] and Blue         
Website

St Joseph's College (SJC or Joeys) is a Catholic, secondary, day and boarding school for boys. It is located in Hunters Hill, a suburb on the Lower North Shore of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Founded by the Marist Brothers in 1881, Joeys currently caters for approximately 1100 students from Years 7 to 12,[3] including over 750 boarders, making it the largest boarding school in Australia,[5] and one of the largest in the southern hemisphere.[6]

The College is affiliated with the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA),[7] the Australian Boarding Schools' Association (ABSA),[2] the Association of Marist Schools of Australia (AMSA),[8] and is a founding member of the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales (AAGPS).[9]

In 2006, Joeys saw the appointment of its first lay headmaster, Mr Ross Tarlinton.[10]

History

Foundation

St Joseph's College (SJC) can trace its origins back to the Marist Brothers' school founded in Harrington Street, Church Hill, which was attached to St Patrick's Catholic Church. The Headmaster, Rev. Br Emilian Pontet then sought out land to found a new school elsewhere. After inspecting several locations, Hunters Hill was chosen due to its proximity to the Marist Fathers' Monastery and Parish of Villa Maria.

On 29 July 1881, the Headmaster, Rev. Br Emilian Pontet, transferred the school from Harrington Street to Hunters Hill, founding St Joseph's College in a temporary wooden building with a student population of 55. Within six years of its founding, keen observers had taken notice. In 1887, James Francis Hogan wrote in The Irish in Australia that:

St John's College, affiliated to the University of Sydney; St. Ignatius' College, Riverview, conducted by the Jesuit Fathers; and St. Joseph's College, Hunter Hill [sic], under the management of the Marist Brothers, are three educational institutions that reflect the highest credit on the Catholic population of the parent colony.[11]

Brother Emilian Pontet was the founding headmaster (1881-1890); he was succeeded by Brother Stanislaus (1890-1894) who continued the building program at the main campus and oversaw the acquisition of 16 acres of playing fields close by.[12]

List of Headmasters

Campus

The College opened in 1881 in a temporary wooden building, however, it has continued to expand its grounds and buildings since then. Some examples are the construction of the main building's southern wing in 1882–1884; the building of the central and northern wing in 1889–1894 and the building of the Chapel in 1938–1940. The south-eastern corner of the College campus is a property which was acquired in 1882 with the assistance of a benefactor named O'Shaugnessy. The property was then known as Joubert's Reserve and the original small stone cottage that stood on the land when it was acquired still remains on the site today. The College's main playing fields ("the Park") are located 300m away from the main campus and were bought in 1893 from Charles Gilbert Heydon a distinguished lawyer and devout Catholic who offered the Brothers for sale at a discount 16 acres he had acquired nine years earlier.[13] Mr Heydon agreed to a generous instalment plan to assist the Brothers to make the purchase and the interest bill was met by the same benefactor O'Shaugnessy who had assisted with the acquisition of Joubert's Reserve eleven years earlier.

Today the College is situated on a 16 hectares (40 acres) campus overlooking the Lane Cove and Parramatta Rivers, in suburban Hunter's Hill, 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) from the Sydney central business district.[5] The current facilities of the school include:

Accommodation

St Joseph's has several buildings used for accommodation. Five of these are for Years 10, 11 and 12 respectively. The College's main building, which has stood since the 1880s, contains dorms for the junior years, as well as all the College's refectories (dining rooms), the infirmary, teachers lounge, a chapel and administration offices. The Year 12 Boarding Area was totally refurbished in early 2009, creating modern and comfortable accommodation for senior students.

The College operates kitchens and a laundry catering for all students, teachers and brothers.

Academic facilities

The College has a significant number of academic facilities, including a large four-storey building solely containing science laboratories and classrooms (which have recently been refurbished), a library and resource centre, a visual arts centre, a music centre, a hall and five computer labs, each with 20 plus computers. Stage one of a major refurbishment of the resource centre was completed early in 2009, creating a modern, up-to-date teaching and learning facility that provides students with high quality resources and technology for today's fast paced digital world. In 2013, St. Joseph's opened a new Technology and Arts Precinct, including numerous art studios, workshops and classrooms.

Sporting facilities

Similar to other GPS schools, St Joseph's has significant sporting facilities for use in both training and competition. The College owns and maintains approximately 10 playing fields for cricket, rugby and soccer. Its main rugby field is in a 10-hectare (25-acre) facility known as "the Park" and located two blocks from the school campus and is often used by higher level teams for training purposes.

On the main school campus there are ten tennis courts, five basketball courts, a number of cricket nets, a swimming pool, two gymnasiums (for gymnastics and weightlifting respectively) and a cardio room. The boatshed and pontoons for the school's rowing club are situated some 300 metres (980 ft) from the main campus on nearby Tarban Creek, a northern tributary of Sydney's Parramatta River.

Outdoor education facilities

In 1986 St Joseph's opened "Colo", an outdoor education centre for students. It provides education in various outdoor activities, culminating in extended expeditions in Year 9.

Collectable School Cigarette card featuring the Joeys colours & crest, c. 1910s

Organisation

Marist Brothers

An ageing population of Marist brothers have their own accommodation on the school grounds (some in the retired brothers quarters) and work to maintain its status, holding a number of executive positions at the College. In 2006, Ross Tarlinton became the first lay headmaster of the College.

Sexual abuse allegations

In June, July and August 2014 the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, a royal commission of inquiry initiated in 2013 by the Australian Government and supported by all of its state governments,[14] began an investigation into the response of Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse in schools in the ACT, NSW and Queensland.[15] Five former students, one former teacher, a former assistant principal and two former principals, former and current Marist officials and clergy, and one of the clergy at the centre of the allegations gave evidence or made statements before the Royal Commission[16] that the alleged cases of abuse happened during the 1970s and 1980s at Daramalan College, Canberra, at Lismore, Campbelltown and in Far North Queensland.[17][18][19][20]

In March 2015 a former Marist brother was arrested over a number of sex offences allegedly committed at St Joseph's College and St Gregory's College in Campbelltown in the 1980s.[21]

Boarding

St Josephs College

With a boarding population of over 750, SJC is the largest boarding school in Australia (in terms of student numbers). Joeys offers full boarding as well as weekly boarding options (where students go home on weekends). In recent times the College has also offered day-schooling, and students who do not board are known as 'day-boys'.

A number of dormitories ('dorms') and refectories ('refs') are located on the College grounds for boarders and day-boys alike. Dorms and refs are segregated by year, and students tend to receive larger, more private and more privileged accommodation as they advance through the years(i.e. students move from large dormitories to single rooms, and from the College's original accommodation facilities to newly built accommodation).

Curriculum

As a secondary school in New South Wales, the College teaches Year 7 to 12 students in accordance with the State Government's education curriculum, as determined by the Board of Studies. At the end of Year 12, successful students are accredited with their Higher School Certificate (HSC).

Co-curriculum

St Joseph's College offers a variety of co-curricular activities, including Senior Orchestra, Chess and Debating. Joeys is also has the reputation of being a very strong sporting school.

File:Joeysathletes1939.jpg
Joey's boys at GPS athletics, 1939

Sport

St Joseph's official sporting calendar revolves around competition with the eight other GPS Schools. However, it regularly competes against Combined Associated Schools (CAS) during the lead-up to each season, and as a member of the GPS (in GPS vs CAS matches) at the end of each season.

The Joey's boatshed is in Tarban Creek, a short walk from the College

GPS sports include:

Rugby union

St Joseph's has strong sporting traditions, particularly in rugby union where it has produced many famous grade, state schoolboy, Australian schoolboy, state and national representatives including three Wallaby Captains.[22] By 2007, St Joseph's had won 54 1st XV premierships since the AAGPS competition commenced in 1889, and had come second in many other years. In 24 of those 57 premierships they were undefeated including 2007 where both the 1st and 2nd XV finished undefeated.

Cricket

Cricket at St Joseph's remains the most popular summer sport.[citation needed] Stan McCabe is the College's most famous cricketer. In recent years, St Joseph's has been one of the premier cricketing teams, taking out the coveted 1st XI competition in both 2010 and 2012. In addition, they have also been successful in the Marist Cricket Carnival, which they are one of the current (2012) Champions.

Rowing

Joeys was the fourth Sydney school to take to the water (after Grammar, Riverview & Shore) and has been rowing in the GPS competition since the 1907. The main GPS race has been conducted in VIIIs since 1910. Joey's had their inaugural GPS victory in 1911, then again in 1916.[23] From the 1910s till the 1930s the St Joseph's College Regatta opened the Sydney club and school racing season.

Notable alumni: 'Old Boys'

Alumni of St Joseph's College, Hunter's Hill are commonly referred to as Old Boys, and may elect to join the schools alumni association, the St Joseph's College Old Boys' Union (SJCOBU).[24] For a list of notable SJC Old Boys, see List of Old Boys of St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill.

See also

References

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  4. Ross Tarlinton (2008). CollegeNews: From the Headmaster. Joeys.org. Accessed 2009-12-22.
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  6. Boarding - St Joseph's College Accessed 3/7/2009
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  11. Hogan, James Francis, The Irish in Australia, 1887. Reproduced by Project Gutenberg (retrieved 15 June 2006).
  12. Meliora Life ed II
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  22. Australian Schools Rugby
  23. Early rowing club histories
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Bibliography

  • Naughtin, M. 1981. A Century of Striving: St Joseph's College, Hunter's Hill, 1881-1981. Macarthur Press, Sydney. ISBN 0-9595559-6-X.
  • Meliora Life, edition II May 2011 (a publication of the St Joseph's College Foundation Ltd).

External links