Portora Royal School
Coordinates: 54°21′04″N 7°39′18″W / 54.351°N 7.655°W
Portora Royal School "P.R.S." | |
---|---|
Omnes Honorate | |
Address | |
1 Lough Shore Road, BT74 7HA Enniskillen Northern Ireland | |
Information | |
Type | Grammar School |
Established | 1618 |
Founder | King James the First |
Status | Closed |
Closed | Tuesday 28th June, 2016 |
Chairman | Bishop John McDowell |
Principal | Dr J.N. Morton OBE, Ed.D, M.Ed, M.A, B.A, B.S.Sc, DASE, PQH |
Vice Principal | Mr Trevor Smith |
Chaplain | The Very Revd Kenneth Hall |
Enrollment | 491 (2013/14) |
Houses | Ulster, Munster, Connaught, Leinster, Gloucster (Year 8) |
Colour(s) |
Black and Gold |
Nickname | Wasps |
Affiliations | HMC |
Website | School Website |
Portora Royal School located in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, was one of a number of 'free schools' founded by Royal Charter in 1608, by James I. Originally called Enniskillen Royal School, the school was established some ten years after the Royal Decree, in 1618, 15 miles outside Enniskillen at Ballybalfour, before moving to Enniskillen in 1661. It was not until 1778 that the school moved to its present location on Portora Hill, Enniskillen, when the nucleus of the present school was built.
Formerly a boarding school, in its final years Portora catered for 490-day students. Originally the school only accepted male pupils, but in the 20th century females were first admitted to Portora; the school's website states, "the year 1979 saw a break from the tradition of the previous 361 years when a small number of girls were accepted as pupils. The number of girl pupils increased from the original 9 boarders and 2 daygirls of 1979 to a maximum of 31 girls in 1984. As of September 2011, girls were able to enroll into 6th form."
On Tuesday 28 June 2016 Portora Royal School closed after 398 years. This was to facilitate the launch of Enniskillen Royal Grammar School in September 2016.
Statistics
- Age range: 11 – 18
- Day pupils: 491 boys & girls
- Annual school fees: £150, though this is just a 'voluntary' contribution as the school is a state grammar school, not a fee-paying private school but there is a £46 compulsory fee. Also various 'voluntary' contributions will be expected to be made to the school's sporting teams, even of those who do not play sport.
- Total pupils: 491 boys & girls
- Including 6th form/FE: 130 boys & girls
- Staff numbers: 33 full-time
- Method of entry: For entry from September 2010, following the abolition of The Transfer Test from 2009, pupils will be admitted on the basis of performance in the Post Primary Transfer Consortium tests, in English and Mathematics. The Post-Primary Transfer Consortium is made up of 28 Catholic, four non-denominational and two integrated schools.
- Professional affiliations: HMC, ISC
- Religious affiliation: Non-denominational, historically Irish Anglican although the school still affiliates with St Macartin's Cathedral, Enniskillen
- Headmaster: Dr J.N. Morton
- Vice Principal: Mr Trevor Smith
Portora Boat Club
Rowing has always been a major sport at Portora due to its location by Portora Lough. The boat club was originally for school pupils only but it was opened to students from St. Michael's College, Enniskillen, and later other schools, as a peace making programme after the Enniskillen bombing. The boat club enters the Henley Regatta and is officially the best junior boat club in Ireland.
Formation of Enniskillen Royal Grammar School
A proposal by the Department of Education to merge Portora Royal School with the Enniskillen Collegiate Grammar School to form "Enniskillen Royal Grammar School" was approved by the Minister of Education, John O'Dowd, in June 2015 but the matter was taken to the High Court in October 2015 due to a lot of local opposition. However, the High Court bid to stop the amalgamation of the two Enniskillen grammar schools failed.[1]
Portora Royal School and the Enniskillen Collegiate Grammar School closed at the end of the 2015/2016 school year. The new co-educational Enniskillen Royal Grammar School then opened in September 2016. Initially, the school will operate on a split site, but there are plans to build a single new school. It is expected that the new school will be built at the current Portora site, but this has not yet been confirmed.
Notable headmasters
- 1935–1945: I. M. B. Stuart, Ireland rugby footballer.[2]
Notable Old Portorans
- See also Category:People educated at Portora Royal School
- Dickie Lloyd, cricketer and rugby union player.
- Denis Parsons Burkitt, surgeon.
- Oscar Wilde, playwright[3]
- William Hearn, legal academic.
- Samuel Beckett, winner of Nobel Prize in Literature[3] and the only winner of the Nobel Prize to have played first-class cricket.
- Rev Henry Francis Lyte, Anglican minister and Hymn writer[4]
- Nigel Dodds, politician – MLA and Member of Parliament, Deputy Leader of the Democratic Unionist Party
- Neil Hannon, singer and song writer
- Michael Jackson, Church of Ireland Lord Archbishop of Dublin (and formerly Lord Bishop of Clogher)
- Harry West, politician (Ulster Unionist Party leader and Stormont Minister)
- Edward Cooney, Cooneyite founder[3]
- Sir Jim Kilfedder, former Unionist MP[5]
- Billy McComb, world famed entertainer and magician
- James David Bourchier, journalist and Bulgarian confidant[6]
- Ken Fleming, civil engineer and foundations specialist
- John Beavor-Webb, yacht Designer and Master of Graceful Line.
- Dr E. Charles Nelson – botanist.
- Leo McKinstry, journalist and author
- Desmond Arthur, early 20th century pilot.
- James Gamble, founder of Procter & Gamble.
- Jimmy Moore, Bishop of Connor
- Sir Charles Tegart, Commissioner of the Indian Police and Palestine fort builder.
- Sir Edward Sullivan, 1st Baronet, Lord Chancellor of Ireland.
- Vivian Mercier, literary critic
- Leslie Waddington, art dealer[7]
Miscellaneous
- Former pupil Oscar Wilde won a scholarship to Trinity College, Dublin, and his name therefore appears on the school's Honours board. The name shines more brightly than those of his contemporaries and visitors have suggested that it has been deliberately highlighted. In fact, following his conviction and imprisonment in the 1890s, the name was initially deleted but was reinserted in the 1930s, which accounts for its lustre. There is also an Ulster History Circle Blue Plaque on the school building commemorating him.
The house system
- A house system was introduced in 1919, whereby pupils were placed into one of four houses, named after the four provinces of Ireland, Ulster, Munster, Leinster or Connacht, irrespective of which part of Ireland they came from.
- Pupils in their first year at Portora entered Gloucester House, a separate preparatory department. Today, there is no separate prep school, however the name Gloucester House survives as the name of the Pastoral House for Year 8 pupils.
- The remainder of the school is divided into the four provincial houses.
However, Houses exist to facilitate a range of extra-curricular provision and the pastoral provision is horizontal with form tutors and Key Stage heads reporting to Vice Principal Student Support.
See also
References
- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-35485887
- ↑ STUART, Ian Malcolm Bowen in Who Was Who (A. & C. Black), online edition by Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 18 February 2014 (subscription site)
- 1 2 3 Robinson, James. 2005. Pentecostal Origins: Early Pentecostalism in Ireland in the Context of the British Isles: Studies in Evangelical History and Thought. Milton Keynes, United Kingdom: Paternoster, pp. 34–35.. ISBN 978-1-84227-329-6
- ↑ Patrick M. Geoghegan. 2009. Lyte, Henry Francis. In James McGuire, James Quinn (ed.), Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63331-4
- ↑ Patrick Maume. 2011. Kilfedder, Sir James. In James McGuire, James Quinn (ed.), Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63331-4
- ↑ James Quinn. 2009. Bourchier, James David. In James McGuire, James Quinn (ed.), Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63331-4
- ↑ "Leslie WADDINGTON". Debrett's People of Today. Debrett's. Retrieved 5 May 2014.