De La Salle School, St Helens
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| De La Salle School, St Helens | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
Mill Brow , , WA10 4QH | |
| Coordinates | Lua error in Module:Coordinates at line 489: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). |
| Information | |
| Type | Voluntary aided school |
| Motto | "Our Vision; to pursue excellence" |
| Religious affiliation | Roman Catholic |
| Established | 1987 |
| Founder | De La Salle Brothers |
| Local authority | St Helens |
| Department for Education URN | 104834 Tables |
| Ofsted | Reports |
| Chair | Teresa Sims |
| Head teacher | Andrew Rannard |
| Gender | Coeducational |
| Age | 11 to 16 |
| Houses | Campion - Mount Carmel - West park - Notre Dame |
| Colours | Year 7 - yellow, Year 8 - green, Year 9 - red, Year 10 - blue, Year 11 - purple |
| Website | http://www.delasalle.st-helens.sch.uk/ |
De La Salle School, Eccleston, St Helens is an 11-16 coeducational comprehensive Roman Catholic secondary school which is linked to the worldwide La Sallian community. The school in its current form was created in 1987 after the amalgamation of several Roman Catholic high schools in the area (West Park, Notre Dame, St. Edmund Campion and Mount Carmel). Its trustees are the De La Salle Brothers, who have a house nearby.
There are 1,200 pupils and about 140 staff.
History
[edit | edit source]Grammar schools
[edit | edit source]Two of the former schools were called West Park Grammar School and Notre Dame High School, which were both direct grant grammar schools.[1]
The first statement in the Brothers' History of the House was: "September 18, 1911. The school was opened today by our Brothers. The Brothers are Brother Nilus, Brother Alphonse and Brother Francis. We commenced with 37 pupils."
Twelve years earlier in 1899, Father Hearne, the parish priest of Sacred Heart, had bought a house in St George's Road and set up a Catholic school for boys to complement the school for girls opened by the Sisters of Notre Dame. It was recognised as a Secondary School and was receiving small grants from the St Helens Education Committee. The Education Committee subsequently withdrew grants on the grounds of inadequate accommodation and insufficient teaching facilities. The agreement by which the Brothers took over Father Hearne's School in 1911 provided for his house to become the Brothers' residence with adjoining stables becoming two classrooms. In 1911 Brother Nilus opened with 37 pupils. In 1912 the number of students was 100.
Campus
[edit | edit source]The school completed a large building programme in June 2013. Nearly half of the building stock was rebuilt, while almost all of the remainder was remodelled. [citation needed]
Notable former pupils
[edit | edit source]This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (August 2022) |
- Steve Prescott (1973–2013) - international rugby league player
- Paul Wellens (b. 1980) - rugby league player, St Helens RLFC[2]
- Michael Parr (b. 1986) - actor
- Emma Rigby (b. 1989) - actress[3]
- Stephanie Davis (b. 1993) - actress[4]
- Jason Gilchrist (b. 1994) - footballer[5]
- Andrew Langtree, actor[6]
- David Tench, musician[7]
West Park School
[edit | edit source]- David P. Houghton (b. 1966) - Professor of National Security Affairs, Naval War College
- Johnny Vegas (b. 1970) - comedian
West Park Grammar School
[edit | edit source]- Bernie Clifton (b. 1936) - entertainer
- Ray Connolly (b. 1940) - screenwriter
- Tom Brophy (b. 1942) - rugby player
- Chris Hesketh (1944–2017) - rugby player
- Sean Hughes (1946–1990) - history teacher, Labour MP, Knowsley South (1983–1990)
- Pete Postlethwaite (1946–2011) - actor
- Ian Lenagan (b. 1946) - businessman, Chairman English Football League
- Brendan O'Neill (b. 1948) - businessman, Executive ICI
- Pete McCarthy (1951–2004) - comedian and television presenter
- John P. Burrows FRS (b. 1954) - Professor of Physics of the Ocean and Atmosphere
- Frank Cottrell-Boyce (b. 1959) - screenwriter
- Andy Platt (b. 1963) - rugby player
- Kevin Simms (b. 1964) - rugby player
- Mick Burke (b. 1941) - mountaineer
Notre Dame High School
[edit | edit source]- Liz Twist (b. 1956) - Labour MP Blaydon (2017–)
- Kathryn Mitchell (b. 1963) - academic, Vice-Chancellor University of Derby
- Ann Williams (b. 1965) - Olympic athlete
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). Growing up in St Helens by John D Vose Memories and recollections of a glass town. Chapter 5
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ From Hollyoaks to Hollywood for St Helens' Emma Rigby?
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