| St Patrick's Christian Brothers' College, Kimberley | |
|---|---|
CBC | |
| | |
| Location | |
| |
| , South Africa | |
| Coordinates | 28°44′52″S24°46′34″E / 28.747896°S 24.776114°E |
| Information | |
| School type | Independent School, regulated by the Independent Schools’ Association of Southern Africa (ISASA). |
| Motto | Latin: Facere et Docere, lit. 'To do and to teach' and Latin: Age Quod Agis, lit. 'Translated: Do what you do well' |
| Religious affiliation | Christian |
| Denomination | Catholic |
| Established | 1897 |
| Principal | Craig Neave |
| Gender | Co-Ed |
| Language | English |
| Houses | Spiers, Cavanagh, Keeley, Michaelis |
| Colours | Green, blue and yellow |
| Rival | Diamantveld High School, Kimberley Boys' High School |
| Feeder schools | Newton Primary School, Diamantveld Primary School, St Patricks CBC(Primary) |
| Alumni | John Briscoe |
| Website | stpatricks.co.za |
Christian Brothers' College Kimberley (CBC), the first Christian Brothers' College (School) in South Africa, was founded by the Christian Brothers from Ireland, UK on 8 September 1897. It is situated in Kimberley, Northern Cape, South Africa. The founder was E.I.Rice. It is a Catholic High School. [1]
JJ Mullan was the first Head Master. In 1905, the school opened boarding facilities. These hostels were designed by Rogers and Ross. It was built by Church and MacLauchlin. [2] [3]
The crest consists of a star, a cross, a circle and a book, that is open. It also shows the symbols A and Ω, Alpha and Omega. [4] The meaning is:
Two mottos are used collectively: [4]
CBC was temporarily closed from 16 February 1900 to 7 May 1900. During World War I it was used as a military hospital. Teaching went ahead in tents erected on the schools premises. In 1933 a clock tower as erected as a memory to the soldiers that died in the war. [5]
On the school's ground, a chapel was built which opened in 1923. [6] It was designed by an Irish architect o'Connor, G.L. [7]
It is a co-ed school, with English as medium of education. It is an Independent School, regulated by the Independent Schools Association of Southern Africa (ISASA). [8]
In 1997, the school on its 100th year celebration decided to change its name to St Patrick CBC. [9]