Gort na Móna Secondary School: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 217: | Line 217: | ||
'''Gort na Móna Secondary School''' was a school in [[Belfast]], Northern Ireland for pupils aged 11-16. It opened in September 1971 with an enrollment of 120 pupils.<ref>Corpus Christi College Twentieth Anniversary Book, p239</ref> In 1988 the school amalgamated with St Thomas's Secondary School, St Peter's Secondary School and St Paul's Secondary School to become [[Corpus Christi College]], Belfast.<ref>Irish News Editorial 25th February 1987</ref> The first school premises were located at the current [[Gort na Mona GAC]] site in Turf Lodge and consisted of a series of wooden huts while construction of the main building took place. |
'''Gort na Móna Secondary School''' was a school in [[Belfast]], Northern Ireland for pupils aged 11-16. It opened in September 1971 with an enrollment of 120 pupils.<ref>Corpus Christi College Twentieth Anniversary Book, p239</ref> In 1988 the school amalgamated with St Thomas's Secondary School, St Peter's Secondary School and St Paul's Secondary School to become [[Corpus Christi College]], Belfast.<ref>Irish News Editorial 25th February 1987</ref> The first school premises were located at the current [[Gort na Mona GAC]] site in Turf Lodge and consisted of a series of wooden huts while construction of the main building took place. |
||
[[Image:GortnaMonaStaffroom.jpg|400px|Gort |
[[Image:GortnaMonaStaffroom.jpg|400px|Gort na Móna Staff Room|left]] |
||
The new purpose built buildings were opened in 1973, on a green field site with space for sports pitches and playing fields. Three open air handball courts were added to the side of the building at the Dermott Hill entrance. The school continued to expand and in 1980 there were 36 teachers and 550 pupils.<ref>Corpus Christi College Twentieth Anniversary Book, p239</ref> The two main buildings were joined at the entrance end, by a corridor walkway which housed the staff room. One building housed the classrooms were Science, Maths, Geography, Religion, English, Music, Art, Tecnology and Design were taught. The Sports Halls was located in the other building. Today the buildings are now used by St Gerard's Education Centre. <ref>http://www.stgerardsbelfast.org/?page_id=19 stgerardsbelfast.org</ref> |
The new purpose built buildings were opened in 1973, on a green field site with space for sports pitches and playing fields. Three open air handball courts were added to the side of the building at the Dermott Hill entrance. The school continued to expand and in 1980 there were 36 teachers and 550 pupils.<ref>Corpus Christi College Twentieth Anniversary Book, p239</ref> The two main buildings were joined at the entrance end, by a corridor walkway which housed the staff room. One building housed the classrooms were Science, Maths, Geography, Religion, English, Music, Art, Tecnology and Design were taught. The Sports Halls was located in the other building. Today the buildings are now used by St Gerard's Education Centre. <ref>http://www.stgerardsbelfast.org/?page_id=19 stgerardsbelfast.org</ref> |
Revision as of 23:38, 6 February 2012
54°35′37″N 5°59′37″W / 54.59355°N 5.99362°W
Gort na Móna Secondary School was a school in Belfast, Northern Ireland for pupils aged 11-16. It opened in September 1971 with an enrollment of 120 pupils.[1] In 1988 the school amalgamated with St Thomas's Secondary School, St Peter's Secondary School and St Paul's Secondary School to become Corpus Christi College, Belfast.[2] The first school premises were located at the current Gort na Mona GAC site in Turf Lodge and consisted of a series of wooden huts while construction of the main building took place.
The new purpose built buildings were opened in 1973, on a green field site with space for sports pitches and playing fields. Three open air handball courts were added to the side of the building at the Dermott Hill entrance. The school continued to expand and in 1980 there were 36 teachers and 550 pupils.[3] The two main buildings were joined at the entrance end, by a corridor walkway which housed the staff room. One building housed the classrooms were Science, Maths, Geography, Religion, English, Music, Art, Tecnology and Design were taught. The Sports Halls was located in the other building. Today the buildings are now used by St Gerard's Education Centre. [4]
Sport
As an Irish Christian Brothers' school, the school had strong Gaelic Athletic Association ties, gaelic football, gaelic handball and hurling were encouraged and developed, leaving a legacy in the surrounding housing estates. Br. T. F. Moroney was responsible for the development for the teams and choose the dominant maroon colour of Galway GAA as well as sky blue and saffron for the school team colours. [5]