St Bede's College, Manchester Explained

St Bede's College
Coordinates:53.4515°N -2.2526°W
Motto:Latin: Nunquam Otio Torpebat
("He never relaxed in idleness")
Established:1876
Type:Private day school
Public School
Religious Affiliation:Roman Catholic
Head Label:Headteacher
Head:María Kemp
Chair Label:Chair of Trustees
Chair:Xavier Bosch
Founder:Cardinal Herbert Vaughan
Address:Alexandra Park
City:Manchester
Country:England
Postcode:M16 8HX
Dfeno:352/6032
Enrollment:700~
Gender:Coeducational
Lower Age:3
Upper Age:18
Houses:Siena, Bosco, Campion and Magdalene (formerly St. Alban, St. Chad, St. Cuthbert, St. Wilfred)
Colours:Blue and gold
Publication:Baeda
Free Label 1:Former pupils
Free 1:Old Bedians

St Bede's College is an Independent Roman Catholic co-educational day school for pupils between 3 and 18 years located on Alexandra Road South in Whalley Range, Manchester, England. It is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

Originally founded in 1876 in All Saints, Manchester as a Commercial College by the Bishop of Salford, Herbert Vaughan, the College moved to its present site on Alexandra Park Road in 1877 and in 1891 became the Diocesan Junior Seminary. The College is no longer operated by the Diocese of Salford and is today an independent charitable trust run by a board of trustees.[1]

History

The original school was at 16 Devonshire Street, Grosvenor Square, off Oxford Road (then called Oxford Street) and was set up in 1876 by the then Bishop of Salford, Herbert Vaughan, later Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster. Originally, the school was conceived as a "commercial school" to prepare the sons of Manchester Catholics for a life in business and the professions.

This was the first school under the patronage of Saint Bede. In August 1877, the Manchester Aquarium on Alexandra Road South and the plot of land around it was purchased by the then Bishop Vaughan for College purposes. On 10 September 1877, St Bede's College re-opened in the Manchester Aquarium with 45 pupils who were taught by 11 staff, 8 of them priests. The faculty lived in 'Rose Lawn', until the accommodation levels were completed in the Vaughan Building, for both clergy and a large number of boarders. The somewhat spartan conditions were alleviated by a team of long-serving nuns, who took care of the domestic and catering requirements, as well as a number of lay staff.

In the late 1870s and early 1880s, the Vaughan building was constructed (see pictures). The original plan was for a symmetrical building, with five-storey towers at each end. Only one half of this design was ever carried out, but the main ground floor corridor of the Vaughan building is an impressive centrepiece for the school all the same. An imposing entrance on Alexandra Road (decorated with ceramic mouldings by Tinworth[2]) leads into a corridor adorned with mosaics and marble. The original aquarium building (now the school's Academic Hall) leads off the main corridor directly opposite the main entrance. Appropriately the decorative scheme includes plaster mouldings of fish and other marine animals.

In 1891, Salford Catholic Grammar School (the Diocesan Junior seminary) amalgamated with the College which duly became the place where over 500 priests, some of whom later became bishops or archbishops, were educated.

The College Chapel was built in 1898 and the Henshaw Building, named after the fifth Bishop of Salford, was opened around 1932. The Beck Building, named after the seventh Bishop of Salford George Andrew Beck, was opened in 1958 while the St Regis Building, built in the first decade of the 20th century as a retreat house for the Cenacle Convent, was bought by the College in 1970. It remained empty until 1984 when the Governors took the decision to make St Bede's co-educational. Over the next three years, the St Regis building was completely renovated and allowed the College roll to increase from 630 at the beginning of the 1980s to just under 1000 today.[3] Between 1886 and 1896, the College had an affiliate school [a '[[realgymnasium]]'] at Bonn, Germany, then a small town on the Rhine. It was never successful.[4] British victims of the war are commemorated in the College Chapel.

From the time of the school's move to Alexandra Road, the College supported the nearby St Bede's Mission, and priests on the school's staff worked to provide for the spiritual needs of the Catholic population in Whalley Range. In 1893 the Bishop of Salford, John Bilsborrow, appointed Father James Rowan, a former teacher at the college, as priest in charge of the district. The new English Martyrs Parish Church was consecrated on the Feast of the English Martyrs, 4 May 1922.

Today

The school admits children from Roman Catholic and non-Catholic families. Pupils perform well at GCSE and A-level.[5]

The College continues to grow and each year the college admits no more than 100 pupils into year 7 (Upper 3rd).

The St Bede's College Educational Trust attempts to maintain a broad social mix, despite the end of the Assisted Places Scheme, by providing means-tested bursaries.

Members of the Manchester City Academy attend as part of the Premier League’s Full Time Training Model, funded by the club.[6]

School publications

Notable alumni

Alumni of the school, led by the games master and former Sale player Des Pastore MBE, founded the Old Bedians Rugby union Football Club in Chorltonville in 1954.[7] [8]

Musicians

Actors, television personalities, writers and journalists

Clergy

Politics and Business

Sportspersons

Miscellaneous

Reports of abuse

In recent years the College has found itself involved in two separate historic abuse investigations; in 2008, a former teacher Father William Green was charged with various counts of indecent assault and indecency with pupils at the school in the 1970s and 1980s.[12] He admitted the offences and was jailed, but has since been released and has now died. The diocese said that it had co-operated with the police and that safeguards against this happening again had long been in place.[13] Then in 2011 the Manchester Evening News published an article concerning Monsignor Thomas Duggan, who had been Rector at the college during the 1950s and 1960s. It alleged mental, physical and sexual abuse of pupils at the college at that time.[14] [15] An attempt was later made by 57 old boys to bring a private prosecution against the school, but the plaintiffs eventually withdrew the case.[16]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Governance . 12 January 2021 .
  2. http://www.tilesoc.org.uk/tacsdatabase.htm Tiles and Architectural Ceramics Society Database of Ceramic Locations
  3. http://www.stbedescollege.co.uk/st-bedes/history-of-the-college History of the college
  4. Gregory, L.R., A History of St Bede's College, Manchester, 2014
  5. News: St Bede's College. 19 January 2006. BBC News.
  6. News: Pollard . Rob . Pivotal Man City moment that helped shape Blues' vision for their next generation . 5 August 2018 . . 11 May 2016.
  7. http://www.oldbedians.co.uk/ Old Bedians RUFC
  8. News: Tributes paid to rugby's 'oldest winger' . MEN Media . 16 February 2012 .
  9. News: Ducker . James . Phil Foden may have gone from ballboy to 'Pep Guardiola's lad', but Man City's local hero remains firmly grounded . 5 August 2018 . . 3 August 2018.
  10. Web site: St Bede's newsletter 14 June 2019.
  11. News: GB team for 2007 World Championships . BBC Sport . 11 August 2007 .
  12. News: Man charged with 28 sex offences. 17 April 2008. BBC News.
  13. News: Priest faces jail for abusing youngsters. South Manchester Reporter. M.E.N. Media. 21 August 2008.
  14. News: Church says sorry over St Bede's College sex abuse claims. Manchester Evening News. M.E.N. Media. 15 March 2011. Keegan. Mike.
  15. Web site: Bishop apologises to abuse victims at Manchester school . . 15 March 2011 .
  16. News: School of savagery: 'Stuck forever in that room in Manchester with my trousers round my ankles' . .