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HISTORY OF HOLY FAMILY SCHOOL In
1954, the Centenary of the foundation of the Sisters of Mercy in Ennis, the Department of
Education sanctioned a grant of £176.00 towards plastering the rear wall of the convent
school which was built in 1865 at a cost to the sisters of £1,000. This was the first ever grant sanctioned for the
school and was granted on the condition that the sisters would take steps to obtain a site
for a new school and cooperate with the Department in having one built. A SITE IS BOUGHT A 5 acre field in Station Road seemed a very
suitable site. Sr. Lelia McKenna, the then
superior negotiated with the owners, Quinns, and in November 1958 purchased the site for
£4,400.00. No further progress was made
until 1959 when Sr Lelia came back from California, having made a foundation there. She
came back with a dream, a dream of a school such as she had seen in America, the likes of
which had not yet been built in Ireland. It
was to be bright and airy, all the clasrooms facing south, of good proportions, each
classroom self contained with bathroom and cloakroom attached. Only such a school, she said, would be good enough
for the children of Ennis. FROM DREAMS TO PLANS She ran into
difficulties with this vision. The plans,
drawn up by the architect, Mr. Thompson on the instructions of Sr. Lelia far exceeded the
standard size allowed by the Department. Sr.
Lelia persisted. In a letter to the then Minister for Education, Dr. P Hillery, in July
1960 she outlined her reasons: Our new school should exhibit the spirit of hope,
confidence and initiative that our government has brought into the country in the sphere
of industry. At least the capital of Clare
should exhibit one school in which Clare and the rest of Ireland may find inspiration. I
ask you once more to think of future generations of teachers and children whose standards
of living, we hope, will be much higher than ours But
the Department stood firm. Undaunted, Sr. Lelia enlisted the help of Monsignor
ODoherty, parish priest of Lemoore, California, where she had established a convent
the previous year. He came to Ireland in August 1960 and on the promise that he would pay
the cost of larger classrooms the Department sanctioned Mr. Thompsons plans. BUILDING AND COSTS Mr. Cullen, Limerick, was appointed builder and
the contract for £180,000 was signed. The
first sod was turned on the 24th September 1961 and the school was to be finsihed by July
1963. The preparation of the site proved long
and expensive. It was low lying and boggy,
the town sewerage running through it had to be diverted and precautions taken against
flooding. The abnormal site works and the
increased cost of labour and materials had sent original estimate soaring with the result
that the final cost was just under £500.000. The
Department paid £218.000, the Parish paid £80,000 as well as off-setting the interest in
later years. Monsignor ODoherty
honoured his commitment and the Sisters paid the remainder.
In 1964 their bank overdraft was £200,000 and it seemed that they would be
submerged by the debt and the interest on it. As
a result life was hard for the Sisters and money was scarce. Not until 1977 was the debt finally cleared. HOLY FAMILY SCHOOL OPENS The big exodus took place on January 7th 1965. It was a cold misty day as class by class emerged
from the old classrooms, teachers and children laden down with books and equipment.
Waiting to greet everyone were the Principals of both schools, Sr. Malachy and Sr.
Dominic. Little faces lit up in wonder as the children stepped into the dream school which
was warm, bright and spacious. The Cork
Examiner of 31st August 1965 described Holy Family School as the school they will be
copying in 20 years time. Nearly 40
years later we can echo the same sentiments. We
thank God for the vision, inspiration and initiative of all who were involved in its
planning and building and pray Gods blessing on all staff and children in it. Since then Holy Family School has gone through another major refurbishment in 2000/2001. The roof, glazing and floor covering was totally replaced as was all school furniture. The buiding was officially reopened in 2003 by Síle de Valera, Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht at the time. In 2006 we replaced all blackboards with Interactive Whiteboards as part of our ongoing commitment in using ICT in education
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