Blackfriars Priory School
34°53′42″S 138°35′45″E / 34.8950°S 138.5958°E
Blackfriars Priory School | |
---|---|
Address | |
17 Prospect Road, Prospect 5082 , | |
Information | |
Type | Private |
Motto | Deus Scientiarum Dominus (The Lord is an all-knowing God 1 Sam 2:3) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic (Dominican Friars) |
Established | 1953 |
Chairman | David O'Loughlin |
Principal | David Ruggiero |
Chaplain | Peter Toan Nguyen OP |
Grades | ELC–12 |
Gender | Boys (R–12) Co-ed (ELC) |
Enrolment | 760 (R–12) 90 (ELC) (2023) |
Colour(s) | Black, Cambridge blue |
Mascot | Hound[citation needed] |
Affiliations | Sports Association for Adelaide Schools |
Website | blackfriars.sa.edu.au |
Blackfriars Priory School is a private Roman Catholic school for boys situated in Prospect, an inner-northern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. It is conducted by the Dominican Friars of the Province of the Assumption.
History
[edit]The school opened in 1953 in its current location which was then a property called "St Catharine's". The house, which is now part of the school, was built for James Angas Johnson (1841–1909), a grandson of George Fife Angas.[1][2][3]
Statue
[edit]In November 2017, Blackfriars covered up and eventually removed an outdoor statue of St. Martin de Porres after its "unintentionally provocative design . . . created a flurry of activity on social media, prompting the school to take quick action", according to a news report.[4]
The statue depicted the figure of St. Martin "handing a young boy a loaf of bread, which appears to have emerged from his cloak". The boy's head is waist-high with the body of the priest. Students posted photos of it on social media, and the next week it was "cordoned off". A photo shows it covered with a black drape.[4][5]
Principal Simon Cobiac said in a statement that another sculptor would refashion the statue.[4]
Houses
[edit]House name | Colours |
---|---|
Denifle | Red and white and blue |
Jarrett | Blue and red |
Horten | Light blue and white |
Aquinas | Black and white |
Lagrange | Yellow and green |
De Vitoria | Blue and green |
Lacordaire | Red and yellow |
Burke | Yellow and black |
Notable alumni
[edit]Arts
[edit]- Harrison Gilbertson, actor[6]
- John Schumann, singer[7]
Public life
[edit]- Leon Bignell, politician[8]
- Don Farrell, Labor senator[8]
- David O'Loughlin, politician[8]
- Jack Snelling, politician[9]
Sport
[edit]- Carlo Armiento, football (soccer) player
- Alan Didak, Australian rules football player
- Callum Ferguson, cricket player
- Ben Hart, Australian rules football player
- Ben Holland, Australian rules football player
- Nick Holland, Australian rules football player
- Mark Jamar, Australian rules football player
- Teeboy Kamara, football (soccer) player
- Joe Mullen, football (soccer) player
- Martin McKinnon, Australian rules football player
- Oleg Markov, Australian rules football player
- Sean Tasker, Australian rules football player
- Boyd Woodcock, Australian rules football player
References
[edit]- ^ "Mr J Angas Johnson". The Advertiser. 20 May 1902. p. 6 – via Trove.
- ^ St Catharine's, Prospect Road, Photograph c. late 1890s, State Library of South Australia
- ^ History & Tradition, Blackfriars Priory School
- ^ a b c Erin Jones, "Blackfriars Priory School principal explains how awkward covered statue was bungled," The Advertiser, South Australia, 22 November 2017
- ^ Daniel Keane, "Blackfriars Priory School to redesign 'suggestive' statue of saint and child after online ridicule," ABC.net, 21 November 2017
- ^ "Adelaide teen gets AFI award nomination". ABC News. 27 October 2010. Retrieved 23 July 2024.
- ^ Schumann, John (7 April 2015). "Singer-songwriter John Schumann is upset his Redgum hit I was only 19 was used on Saturday by anti-Islam protesters in Hobart and interstate".
- ^ a b c "Dominican priests in Adelaide from 1898; open Blackfriars Priory School on St Catharine's Prospect property, 1953". Adelaide AZ. Retrieved 23 July 2024.
- ^ "Corporate Ladder: your weekly guide to executive appointments - InDaily". www.indaily.com.au. 9 May 2022. Retrieved 23 July 2024.