Collegiate School Celbridge
Celbridge Collegiate School is a former charter school and Protestant girls school situated outside Celbridge in County Kildare in Ireland located 22 kilometres (13 miles) from Dublin. It was known as a nursery of teachers for the Church of Ireland training college and for the proficiency of the Irish language among students.[1] HistoryThe vision for the school was set out in the will of William Conolly:
It was developed from 1733–7 by Katherine Conolly, who gave £50 a year for its maintenance during her life. ArchitectureThe building is of Georgian architecture and its most characteristic feature is the triple gates. It was designed by architect Thomas Burgh who also built the Royal Barracks and famous library building at Trinity College both in Dublin on fifty acres of land to accommodate forty female who were to be "lodged, clothed and dieted" there.[2] The aim of this charity school was to rescue children of the "poor natives from ignorance and superstition" and instruct them in "the English tongue, in manners and in the Protestant faith." Students were employed on the farm and they carried on linen and hempen manufacture through all stages from seed, to loom, to bleaching. In 1837 one hundred students attended, thirty of whom were nominated by Edward Conolly. At the time of Lady Louisa's death it had 600 pupils, It served as a boarding school for Protestant girls until 1973. when the Incorporated Society for Promoting Protestant Schools in Ireland closed the school and transferred the pupils to Kilkenny College.[3] HotelThe building reopened as the Setanta House Hotel on January 25, 1980 and it later became the Celbridge Manor Hotel. It was acquired by a consortium led by US businessman Jeff Leo in 2013 and was later sold in 2022 for around €5.5m.[4] Principals
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