Villanova College | |
Motto: | Vincit Veritas |
Motto Translation: | Truth Conquers |
Established: | 1948 |
Denomination: | Roman Catholic, Augustinians[1] |
Sister School: | Loreto College, Coorparoo |
Patron: | St Thomas of Villanova |
Principal: | Paul Begg |
Country: | Australia |
Coordinates: | -27.4958°N 153.0514°W |
Enrolment: | ~1,500 |
Grades: | 5–12 |
Staff: | ~81 (Full & part-time) |
Hours In Day: | From 8:25am to 3:00pm |
Houses: | Augustine, Rita, Monica, Thomas, Adeodatus, Ambrose, Nicholas, Alypius |
Colours: | Green and gold |
Villanova College is a private, Roman Catholic school for boys located in Coorparoo, a southern suburb of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The school has a non-selective enrolment policy for all years and caters for approximately 1,500 boys in three schools, Junior, Middle and Senior from year five to twelve. Established in 1948 by six Irish priests, led by Ben O'Donnell, who were from the Order of Saint Augustine in the suburb of Hamilton. In 1954, due to lack of prospects for growth in Hamilton, the college moved to its present site at Coorparoo. The college is a member of the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA),[2] The Independent Primary School Heads of Australia (IPSHA) and the Associated Independent Colleges (AIC).
Whinstaines House (after which the suburb was named) was built by prominent society figure Alexander Brand Webster. After his death the house and remaining 9 acres of land were sold in 1925 to Our Lady of the Sacred Heart who established College Whinstanes, which opened as a junior boys boarding school. The school’s motto “Vincit Veritas” is the Webster motto was borrowed from a stained glass window in Whinstaines House with the Webster crest.
In 1948, archbishop James Duhig welcomed Ben O'Donnell with five other Irish Augustinians to Australia, and invited them to start a school in Brisbane. They subsequently established Villanova in the suburb of Whinstanes (now part of Hamilton). On 25 January 1948, the college was officially opened by the chancellor of the University of Queensland, William Forgan Smith, who raised the college flag in front of the main entrance and was blessed by Duhig.[3] In 1953 a decision was made to move the college due to lack of prospects for expansion in Whinstanes.
Early in the 1880s, merchant Reuben Nicklin built a large house Langlands in Coorparoo. In 1886, Nicklin built another house Hatherton (now Queen Alexandra Home) at another site in Coorparoo and sold the Langlands house and its grounds.[4] (Nicklin and his wife died in the wreck of the RMS Quetta in 1890).[5] Thomas Connah and William Brookes bought a large block of land that included Nicklin's house. Connah resided in Nicklin's former residence. Connah became Queensland auditor-general and he sold Langlands to archbishop James Duhig in 1916. Langlands became the Good Samaritan Convent of Saint Scholastica until 1953, when Villanova College moved from Whinstanes to the Coorparoo property.[6] The school was officially opened on 22 November 1953 by Duhig. The building had been built at a cost of £50,000 and could accommodate 500 students.[7] In the 1960s/70s, a library, science laboratories, senior classrooms and a new primary block joined the existing buildings on the campus. During this period, the college saw additional co-curricular facilities including a swimming pool on campus and sporting fields at Tingalpa. During the 1970s/80s the college saw the foundation of the student council as well as the leadership role of all the boys in the senior class which led to the abolition of the prefect system. The election of captain and vice-captains of the school and houses by the senior class was started. The Goold gymnasium and assembly hall was built as well as more classrooms, new science laboratories, a technical drawing room and some art rooms.
The late eighties and nineties saw the governance of the college now entrusted to a college council composed of staff, parents, Augustinians, past students and friends of the college. It also saw new courses start in computing, and catering start at the college and the introduction of a campus-wide computer network as well as computers in classrooms. The 1990s saw the college split from the TAS competition and the foundation of the AIC Competition.[8]
In process of the college's new masterplan, the newest addition to the Villanova is the Saint Thomas of Villanova Learning Centre.
In 2006 the college inaugurated its three present schools:
The most recent building in the college is Saint Thomas of Villanova Learning Centre (released in late 2020). The St Thomas of Villanova Learning Centre, with views of the Brisbane skyline, has been designed for twenty-first-century learning. It adds six classrooms to the senior precinct of the college along with an auditorium, facilities for the head of senior school and pastoral leaders, a common area and spacious breakout areas for individual and group learning. Levels one and two of the St Thomas of Villanova Learning Centre constitute the new junior school of the college. Twelve open-area classrooms with wide and varied breakout areas allow for cooperative teaching and learning.
Villanova College has 8 houses which compete in inter-house athletics, cross-country and swimming, as well as many other school based activities.
Name | Colour | |
---|---|---|
Alypius | Black | |
Ambrose | Green | |
Augustine | Purple | |
Adeodatus | Teal | |
Nicholas | Blue | |
Monica | Yellow | |
Rita | Red | |
Thomas | Pink |
There have been 8 Augustinian rectors at Villanova College in its history. The traditional job of the rector was to lead the college but this changed after the retirement of Michael Morahan in 2009. Now Villanova College has a lay principal with the priests living in the priory at Villanova College looking after school Masses. The current chaplain of the college is Peter Wieneke.[9]
Rector | Years | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
Ben O'Donnell | 1948–1958 | Founding member and first rector of the college[10] | |
Louis Hanrahan | 1959–1964 | ||
Kevin Burman | 1965–1970 | ||
Donal Paul Dempsey | 1971–1975 | ||
Laurence Mooney | 1976–1986 | ||
Peter Weineke | 1987–1994 | ||
Michael Morahan | 1995–2009 | Last Augustinian rector of the college | |
Dennis Harvey | 2010–2014 | ||
Mark Stower | 2015–2021 | [11] | |
Paul Begg | 2022– | [12] |
The college is a foundation member of the Associated Independent Colleges (AIC). The college has sporting fields at Tingalpa, in Brisbane's east suburbs. The AIC sporting association is for all years from fives to open. It comprises 8 schools, Marist College Ashgrove, St Edmunds College, Ipswich, St Patrick's College, Iona College, Padua College, St Laurence's College and St. Peters Lutheran College. The sports played by the association are rugby union, soccer, Austrailian Footbal League, cricket, basketball, volleyball, tennis, swimming, chess, Water Polo, athletics and cross country.
Villanova College has won the following AIC premierships.[13]
The college currently has over 30 main music ensembles including:
The college hosts Queensland's largest music festival for Catholic schools and colleges, Queensland Catholic Schools & College's Music Festival (QCMF).[14] Villanova is home to a music centre, known as the Augustine Centre. Within this centre is the Hanrahan Theatre, named after the second rector of the college, Fr John Hanrahan. Music at Villanova College is a true community enterprise, thanks to enthusiastic support from staff, students, parents, and the local and greater Brisbane communities. Considered an inclusive art, there is a place for all students in our music program, so long as they have the necessary desire and commitment to create music at the highest possible standard.
Villanova runs musical productions in conjunction with Loreto College every two years. Recent productions have been Crazy for You (2014), Guys and Dolls (2016), and most recently High School Musical (2022). Students of Chinese language studies have the opportunity to visit China every second year. The music department holds a music tour for all students in the college's senior ensembles every two years, the most recent tours being to the United States in 2013, Tasmania in 2015, New Zealand in 2017 as part of the Rhapsody Rotorua Music Festival, Sydney in 2019 with the Senior Percussion Ensemble and Villanova Conkestra, where students performed at world-class venues including the Sydney Opera House.
On 27 December 2016 an eight-metre high section of brick wall collapsed in the senior school's Veritas building. No students were injured, as the collapse occurred over the Christmas school holiday. Principal Mark Stower stated the timing of the collapse was "the grace of God."[15] The collapse occurred during a rectification project on the Veritas building to replace non-galvanised steel, of which was used in the original construction, with galvanised steel.[16]
On 27 September 2017 the Cor Unum Centre, located on Villanova Park, was destroyed after a fire engulfed the centre, causing irreversible damage to the facility and the grandstand connected to it.[17] The centre was demolished and replaced with a new grandstand in 2019.
On 24 June 2010 Michael Ambrose Endicott, a former priest at the school, appeared in Brisbane Magistrates Court and plead guilty to two counts of indecent treatment of a child. On two separate occasions in 1977 and 1978, Endicott had photographed the same student naked. On one occasion, the student was taken out of class and into the bush land, where the student was photographed naked.[18] On the other occasion, the student was taken to the school's bell tower and was photographed naked. Endicott was given a one-year jail sentence which was wholly suspended.[19]
On 17 April 2019 Endicott was convicted of three counts of indecent treatment with a child, after it was alleged by another former student that between 1975 and 1981, he was photographed naked on three separate occasions.[20] The former student had been first photographed on a school hiking trip, in which the then nine-year-old student had naked pictures taken of him by a creek. The former student then alleged he was abused similarly on two other occasions. Endicott was sentenced to 18 months in jail, with his sentence to be suspended after 6 months served in prison.[21] The conviction was later overturned in Endicott's favour, as at the time, Queensland law did not consider taking nude photographs of a child to be indecent dealing.[21] [22] Villanova College has since posted an official apology.[23]
Villanova Old Boys Association Incorporated (VOBAI) is the association for all old boys of the college.[24]
Arts
Politics
Sport
Media and entertainment
Law
Villanova's brother school is St. Augustine's College, Brookvale in Sydney.[39] Loreto College is the sister school of Villanova College.
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