History of Aquinas College
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The history of Aquinas College is linked to the establishment of the Christian Brothers' College, Perth (CBC Perth) that was founded in 1894, located in the Perth central business district. CBC Perth was one of the first boarding schools in Western Australia. In 1937, it was decided that a more suitable location was needed to cater for boarding students, and Aquinas College, Perth opened in the following year.
Today, Aquinas College is an independent Roman Catholic single-sex primary and secondary day and boarding school for boys, located at Salter Point, Perth, Western Australia.
Catholic secondary education for boys' was a marginal concern in the small rural society of the former Swan River Colony.[1] Bishop Matthew Gibney and the prosperous Catholic families who had lobbied for the Congregation of Christian Brothers to be invited to Perth wanted to convert the previously haphazard arrangements for boys schooling into a secure arrangement.[1] In 1893, Bishop Gibney met with Brother Treacy, the provincial of the Christian Brothers in Australia in Adelaide and successfully persuaded him to establish a community in Perth. Gibney had petitioned the brothers regularly ever since they had opened a boys school in Melbourne in 1871.[2] Christian Brothers' College (CBC Perth) opened on 31 January 1894.[3]
From the earliest days, the Christian Brothers received and acknowledged crucial support from members of the Catholic community. In order to raise funds, the Brothers sent a young member of the community Brother Regis Hughes, on two extensive journeys in 1896 and 1897 to let Catholics know of the Brothers' work and need to money. The first journey in January 1896 ended with Hughes returning ill from sunstroke, returning to the college until April to recover, between April and October 1896, Hughes toured the South West of Western Australia and the goldfields, records note that the "people subscribed freely" and the journey raised £2,000.[4] The college's beginnings on the corner of St Georges Terrace and Victoria Avenue were small, classes began with two teachers and five students on Monday morning, numbers swelled to twenty-five by the following morning. Lessons were conducted in small buildings set on land adjoining government house.[5]
The opening ceremony on 1 February 1894 reflected both the fragility of the venture and that time, effort and dogged sacrifice would make it succeed.[5] The opening brought together a crowd of well-wishers; The Premier of Western Australia, Lord Mayor of Perth, Catholic and Protestant members of the parliament, the headmaster of the High School (now Hale School), as well as mothers and fathers of potential students to mark the new venture. The headmaster, Brother Anthony O'Brien warned parents not to expect too much too soon and urged the Catholic community to give students and teachers time to prove themselves[5] The need to establish a legitimate presence as a secondary school both within the church and the broader Western Australian community dominated the opening decade of CBC Perth.[6]
Brother Michael Paul Nunan was headmaster at CBC Perth for a total of twenty-one years over three appointments, such a long period in office was unusual among the headmasters of the college, a steady rotation of men through the headmasters' job was linked to the Christian Brothers' philosophy of individual anonymity in the service of the church.[7] His enthusiastic and engaging personality, and strength in public relations, playing a key role in the establishment of the Public Schools Association in 1905. The personal friendship between Brother Nunan and Peter Anderson, the principal of Scotch College, not only fostered an amicable rivalry between the two schools but also consolidated the Catholics perception that they had a legitimate place within the small group of colleges in Perth.[8] His policy of enrolling a substantial number of Jewish and non-Catholic students without requiring them to attend Catholic instruction classes, raised some eyebrows in Catholic circles. However, shaky finances and his energy for the success of the educational enterprise, were strong counter arguments.[9]
Continued success
In the years leading up to the Great War, staff and students of CBC Perth revelled in many indisputable signs of success. Four students won the Rhodes Scholarship between 1905 and 1914, the establishment of the Public Schools Sporting Association (PSSA) in 1905 added zest to interschool games in rowing, cricket, Australian Rules Football, swimming and athletics, boys began playing in red and black colours from 1905.[10] Enduring features of private school life were inaugurated at CBC with the formation of a cadet company in 1909, prefects in 1913, and an Old Collegians Association in 1907.[11]
In 1906 the Brothers produced a magazine-style prospectus to advertise CBC. Details of the college life, curriculum, examination results, staff, and fees were illustrated, with views of the college, successful students and student activities. The front cover carried an idyllic view of the college, entwining the symbols of Ireland and the Empire - shamrocks, English roses, Welsh daffodils, and one Scottish thistle. The flowers hinted quietly - that CBC has a vision of Catholic education aimed at achieving a place in the sun.[12] The college building was expanded along Victoria Avenue, the three storey additions completed in August 1911 provided a new chapel, library and two additional dormitories. CBC was a Catholic institution and much of the weight of Catholicism rested in the chapel.[13] The internal record of the Christian Brothers show a concern for the Catholic spirit of the college, even when it was enjoying widespread success as a social institution.[14] The Congregational visitor, who carried out regular inspections of the Perth community as required by Canon Law, made complaints in 1914 that while the students were "good", they were not "identifiably Catholic".[15]