Our
509 students, representing all levels of academic ability, are taught an
extensive range of subjects supported by excellent facilities in a spacious and
well maintained school surrounded by extensive grounds. We strive to ensure a
warm, caring and cheerful learning environment for our students and staff.
What
we Treasure
1.
Promoting Spiritual & Human Development
We
believe that a knowledge of and a personal relationship with Jesus Christ gives
meaning and purpose in our lives
2.
Achieving Quality in Teaching & Learning
We
are committed to excellence and to continually improving the quality of
teaching & learning
3.
Showing Respect for Every Person
We respect
the unique and intrinsic value of every person
4.
Creating Community
Our
schools are faith communities of welcome and hospitality where Gospel values
are lived and where there is a special care for those most in need.
5.
Being Just & Responsible
We
seek to act justly and responsible in all our relationships
The Story of
St. Mary’s
Catherine McAuley, foundress of the Sisters of Mercy, was a pioneer in Irish Education.
Her primary objective was the relief, education and protection of the poor.
The Sisters of Mercy took up residence in New Ross is 1853, initially in Priory
Street, and from 1856 in South Street. The move to South Street made it
possible for the Sisters to become involved in the provision of education at
Primary and Secondary level (Junior and Senior Departments).
The Senior Department began in 1856 as a private day secondary school teaching
English, Arithmetic, needlework, knitting, lace-making, deportment, elocution
and Religion. It was known as St. Mary’s, an "Academy for Young
Ladies" and had about 6-7 pupils in each class. In 1917 it became a
secondary school for the first time by entering the examination system of the
then Intermediate Board prior to the foundation of the Irish Free State when
all of Ireland was part of the United Kingdom. Curriculum: Irish, English,
Maths, History, Geography, Home Economics, Crafts, Art, Music, Religion,
Commerce and Typing. It continued as a secondary school under the Department of
Education after the founding of the State and in 1926 opened a Boarding
School to complement the Day School.
Sr. Mary Antonia Doyle, a native of Wexford town, was the first Principal of
this school. The first lay teachers to join the secondary staff were Miss
Frances [Fran] Riordan in 1927 and Miss Kay Bolger in 1932.
Throughout the nineteen-thirties, forties and fifties the number of pupils
steadily increased necessitating a move to the premises of the old St. Joseph
National School in Michael Street from 1945. The introduction in 1967 of Free
Secondary Education for day pupils by the then Minister for Education, Donagh
O’Malley, was adopted by the Mercy Sisters which resulted in a dramatic
increase in pupil numbers and the need to find more extensive premises. At that
time the former Good Shepherd Convent in the Irishtown came on the market and
was purchased by the Sisters. The school premises were transferred to the
Irishtown in 1968. The first male teacher, Mr. Seamus Doyle, was appointed at
this time.
Occupying at first part of the original Good Shepherd Convent premises (the Old
School) the school soon needed additional accommodation due to the continued
increase in pupil numbers. The Boarding School closed in 1977 and its premises
were used for a time by the extending day school. In 1981 an extension to the
school premises (the New School) was blessed and opened. This extension
consisted of a number of general classrooms and specialist rooms for Science,
Home Economics, Art, Music and Drama.
The 1980's saw a continued increase in student numbers. Two new
classrooms – "The Bungalow" – were built in 1984. In 1993 an
international-size Sports Hall with changing rooms, showers, toilets and dining
area was blessed and opened. In addition, some new classrooms and a second
science room were built. In the summer of 1994 the Old Assembly Hall was
converted into four classrooms and another classroom was converted into a
Technology and Technical Graphic room.
In the summer of 2003 a new Administration Suite was developed. In 2005 a new
entrance lobby was opened alongside a student social area. Throughout the
school a number of Pastoral Care/ Learning Support rooms have been developed in
accordance with the Mercy Philosophy of Education. In 2006, to mark the 150 years of St. Mary’s, a beautiful Commemorative
Garden was established along the Sports Hall Avenue and a major redecoration of
the whole school began as well as phased improvement of the existing
facilities.
In 2008 grant aid from the Dormant Accounts fund and financial
support from our Parents' Council saw the library relocated to a central
position in the school and further developed and adapted to the needs of a
modern progressive school.
Since 1856 ownership of St Mary's and responsibility for the quality of its
educational service have rested with the Sisters of Mercy. The Mercy
Congregation have been part of a collaborative project with four other
congregations to transfer their secondary schools - including St Mary's - to a
new trustee body called CEIST, which took over from the congregations the
trusteeship of 112 voluntary schools throughout the country.
CEIST aims to continue to nurture and support the Catholic ethos of St Mary's
and other similar schools so that a values-based education can continue to be
available as a choice to parents and young people in the Irish educational
system. The CEIST Charter, which could be summarised in the following
quotation, expresses the values we endeavour to live out in school;
"Opening minds
to the lifelong search for a wisdom that is deeper than information, for an
understanding of life that goes beyond knowledge, for an appreciation of the
dignity of the other that is respectful of difference"
Mons. Dermot Lane
Welcome to this CEIST school. However,
to it’s students past and present and to its associates, the school is likely
to remain known as "the Mercy" – an appropriate title for an
establishment that owes its existence and extraordinary development to the
Sisters of Mercy, New Ross.
Principals
of St. Mary’s:
Sister Mary Antonia Doyle :
1919-1930 approx.
Sister Mary Josephine Conway :
1930 approx.–1959
Sister Mary Oliver Asper :
1959-1971
Sister Mary Perpetua Kilroy :
1971-1976
Sister Mary Hartley (formerly de
Lourdes) : 1976-1982
Sister Maureen Freyne :
1982-1987
Sister Margaret Quike, F.C.J. :
1987-1992
Sister Mary Clancy S.S.L :
1992-2001
Mr. Gerard Watchorn : 2001-2003
Mr. Gene O’Sullivan : 2003-
Deputy Principals of St. Mary’s
Mrs. Louise Hennessy : 1971-2000
Mr. Gene O’Sullivan :
2000-2003
Mrs. Maureen Carroll : 2003-2008
Mr Paul Deavy (Acting)
September-October 2008
Mrs Eva Duhig : 2008-
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