St MacNissi's College

(Redirected from Garron Tower)

55°02′35″N 5°58′05″W / 55.043°N 5.968°W / 55.043; -5.968

St MacNissi's College
Location
Map
Carnlough, County Antrim

Antrim
,
BT44 0JS

Information
TypeGrammar school
MottoLatin: Et Velle et Perficere
(To will and to do)
Opened1951
Closed2010
Colour(s)Purple and gold
Garron Tower

St MacNissi's College (now St Killian's College and colloquially known as Garron Tower) was a Roman Catholic grammar school located 5 miles (8 km) to the north of Carnlough.

History edit

The college grounds are situated on a plateau approximately 200 feet (61 m) above the Antrim Coast Road at Garron Point overlooking the North Channel) and out towards Scotland (Mull of Kintyre).[citation needed]

Garron Tower was built in 1850 at a cost of £4,000 as a summer residence by Frances Anne Vane, Marchioness of Londonderry. She had inherited this part of the Antrim estates from her mother, Anne Katherine MacDonnell, Countess of Antrim who married Sir Henry Vane-Tempest of County Durham.[1]

From 1899 Garron Tower was leased by Henry McNeill Ltd and opened as a hotel. In December 1914 there was a major fire, and the following year McNeill's purchased it for £8,500 and repaired the damage. The hotel closed its doors in 1939.[2]

In 1950 the buildings were acquired by Bishop Daniel Mageean for use as a boarding school for boys. The school opened in September 1951.

On 1 April 2010, St MacNissi's College and two other County Antrim schools, St Aloysius' College, and St Comgall's College, amalgamated to become St Killian's College. Initially St Killian's began its operations from two sites – the former St MacNissi's College site at Garron Tower and the former St Comgall's College site in Larne. The St Comgall's site has since been demolished and St Killian's now operates exclusively from the Garron Tower site.

Buildings edit

Main building edit

The college's grounds stretch for a mile or so around the main building.[citation needed] This main school building has about 30 classrooms, gymnasium, 100-desk study-hall, dining room, kitchens, cloakrooms, first-aid room, and offices. The tower and old building once provided living accommodation for priests. A number of artworks, including by local artists such as Charles McAuley and Sam McLarnon, hang in this old section of the school.[citation needed]

Chapel edit

The chapel was completed in 1955. On the canopy above the High Altar are the words "Laudate Pueri Dominum" which translates as "Boys, Praise the Lord".[citation needed]

On one of the stained glass windows, installed in 1956, are is a note in small print: "As I am making this window the Hungarians have risen in revolt against Communist/Russian rule in Hungary. October 1956".[citation needed]

Boarding rooms edit

A 150-room boarding department (now empty) was opened in 1956. Called St Mary's Residence, single rooms made up the majority of this building, but at the front ends there were double rooms, six in total, two on each floor, which were occupied by the college priests and latterly by brothers or prefects supervising the floors.[citation needed]

Original stables were the open dormitories of Ardclinis, Trostan, and Knocklayde.[clarification needed] On the level above the Ardclinis Dormitory were the rooms of three priests. These old stables now house music, languages, and business studies classrooms. The building is known as St Joseph's.[citation needed]

Sports facilities edit

The tennis courts were situated in a small field which in the 1950s and early 1960s was called the "Wee Field". The £1.6 million block for IT, Home Economics, Art, and Science on the site of the old tennis courts. At the south end of the college grounds there is a wooded area in which the original owner's dog, Urisk, is buried. The headstone remains and on it is written:

"Here Urisk lies and let the truth be told, This faithful dog was blind, infirm and old. Deaf to all else his mistress' voice he knew, Blind though he was, his step to her was true. So strong an instinct by affection fed, Endured till Urisk's vital spirit fled. Stoop grandeur from thy throne ye sons of pride, To whom no want is known, nor wish denied. A moment pause, and blush, if blush you can, To find in dogs more virtue than in man. And share, "midst all your luxury and pelf", one thought for others out of ten for self'".

At the north end there are four sports pitches and a set of hand-ball alleys (1 closed, 1 semi-closed and 1 open), all of which are the 60 × 40 type of alley. Behind the squash courts there is a new outdoor basketball court.[citation needed]

Alumni edit

Other residences of the Marquesses of Londonderry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hyde, H Montgomery (1979). The Londonderrys A Family Portrait. Hamish Hamilton.
  2. ^ Magill, Paul (1990). Garron Tower, County Antrim. Dillons.
  3. ^ "St MacNissi's looks back on a golden era". Highbeam.com. 22 December 2001. Archived from the original on 12 August 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Judiciary of Northern Ireland". Judiciary NI. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  5. ^ "Declan O'Loan". Sdlp.ie. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
  6. ^ Gillespie, Gordon (16 March 2017). "Historical Dictionary of the Northern Ireland Conflict". Rowman & Littlefield. Retrieved 12 August 2017 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ "Donal McKeown". The Irish Times. Retrieved 17 February 2017.

External links edit