2019–20 Harty Cup
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2019–20 Harty Cup
The 2019–20 Dr Harty Cup was the 100th staging of the Harty Cup since its establishment in hurling by the Munster Council of Gaelic Athletic Association in 1918. The draw for the group stage placings took place on 30 July 2019. The competition ran from 15 October 2019 to 1 March 2020. Midlton CBS unsuccessfully defended its title in the semi-finals, losing to Christian Brothers College, Cork. St Flannan's College won the Harty Cup final on 1 March 2020 at Mallow GAA Complex, against Christian Brothers College, Cork, 1–15 to 1–12, their first ever meeting in a final, St Flannan's 22nd successive Harty Cup title overall and their first title having been won 15 years previous. Group A Group A table Group A results Group B Group B table Group B results Group C Group C table Group C results Group D Group D table Group D results Knockout stage Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final References {{Dr Harty Cup 2020 in I ...
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Colours Of Cavan
Color (or colour in Commonwealth English; see spelling differences) is the visual perception based on the electromagnetic spectrum. Though color is not an inherent property of matter, color perception is related to an object's light absorption, emission, reflection and transmission. For most humans, colors are perceived in the visible light spectrum with three types of cone cells ( trichromacy). Other animals may have a different number of cone cell types or have eyes sensitive to different wavelengths, such as bees that can distinguish ultraviolet, and thus have a different color sensitivity range. Animal perception of color originates from different light wavelength or spectral sensitivity in cone cell types, which is then processed by the brain. Colors have perceived properties such as hue, colorfulness (saturation), and luminance. Colors can also be additively mixed (commonly used for actual light) or subtractively mixed (commonly used for materials). If the colors ...
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Newport GAA
Newport GAA is a Tipperary GAA club which is located in County Tipperary, Ireland. Both hurling and Gaelic football are played in the "North Tipperary" divisional competitions. The club is centred on the town of Newport. Lacken Park Named after Paddy Ryan Lacken, and known locally as "The Park". It has four changing rooms (Home on right). With a club house at the end with many Newport GAA memorabilia as well as a kitchen a Referee's room while a meeting room also in the building. There are three pitches, a main pitch with a stand and great floodlight facilities. Separating the two Juvenile pitches and the main pitch is a hurling wall. The Juvenile pitch is very well designed with "The Hill" behind the far goal where the younger supporters watch on from. The Juvenile pitch is also floodlit, while the even younger teams (U8-10) play in a junior pitch with smaller goals and a shorter pitch. The U8-10s train in the GYM in the winter beside St. Mary's Secondary School. While the res ...
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MacDonagh Park
MacDonagh Park is a GAA stadium in Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. It is the home ground of the Nenagh Éire Óg club and has often been used for inter-county matches, including some of Tipperary's National Hurling League The National Hurling League is an annual Inter county, inter-county hurling competition featuring teams from Ireland and England. Founded in 1925 by the Gaelic Athletic Association, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation within the l ... fixtures. See also * List of Gaelic Athletic Association stadiums References Nenagh Sports venues in County Tipperary Tipperary GAA venues {{Ireland-sports-venue-stub ...
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St Francis College Rochestown
St. Francis College Rochestown, sometimes known as Rochestown College or abbreviated as Roco, is an all-boys secondary school in Rochestown, Cork, Ireland. The school's foundation dates to 1884 when a friary was formed by the Franciscan Order. History In the 1870s the Capuchin (Franciscan) order of friars opened a church and monastery on the Rochestown-Monkstown road near Cork city. In the 1880s, a school for novitiates (those seeking to join the order) was opened on the site. While this novitiate school was moved to Kilkenny and elsewhere for some decades, in the 1930s the school returned to the Rochestown friary. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, coinciding with a move to free education in the state, the college expanded into the friary itself, and "dormitories were converted into classrooms". The school continues to operate as a voluntary secondary school under the trusteeship of the Capuchin Franciscan Order. Extra-curricular activities Sporting and extra-curricular activ ...
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Ardscoil Rís, Limerick
Ardscoil Rís is a voluntary, all-boys, Roman Catholic secondary school in Limerick, Ireland. Founded in 1963, it is located on the North Circular Road. History Ardscoil Rís was formally opened by the Christian Brothers, on the North Circular Road in Limerick, on 1 September 1963. It welcomed 52 pupils in its first year and classes were held in an old school house until the first purpose-built classrooms were available. This first intake included Pat Cox, who later became a politician. From its foundation, the school was managed by the Christian Brothers. In 1989, a board of management, representing trustees, staff and parents, was put in place and a lay principal was appointed. From these beginnings, the school, augmented by periodic extensions, grew. By 2018, it had grown to over 740 students and had fifty teaching staff. A team from the school won the RTÉ television secondary schools quiz programme ''Blackboard Jungle'' in 1993. The late twentieth century witnessed the ...
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Our Lady's Secondary School, Templemore
Our Lady's Secondary School, Templemore, is a second-level school in Templemore, County Tipperary, Ireland. The school's motto () means "mercy". It is under the ethos of the Catholic Church and is located in the ecclesiastical parish of Templemore, Clonmore and Killea. History The school was established when the Sisters of Mercy opened a convent in Templemore in 1863. In 1955 the Convent School became a Voluntary Secondary School, catering for around three hundred girls, including eighty boarders. The Christian Brothers School opened in 1932, providing secondary education for boys. In 1985, the two schools amalgamated to form Our Lady's Secondary School, combining the philosophies of Catherine McAuley and Edmund Ignatius Rice. Up to that point, the Christian Brothers School had been known as Templemore CBS. Co-operation had existed between the two communities since the 1930s. In 2003, St. Sheelan's Vocational College ceased to provide secondary education and merged with Our ...
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Killeagh GAA
Killeagh GAA club is a hurling and Gaelic football club located in the small village of Killeagh in east County Cork, Ireland. The club is affiliated with the East Cork division of Imokilly and the Cork county board. It is the sister club of Glenbower Rovers GAA and St.Ita's GAA. History Hurling and Gaelic football was played in the parish of Killeagh before the foundation of the GAA in 1884. The first game that Jamesy Kelleher of Dungourney played was in 1892 in Dangan field in the parish of Killeagh. At that time Killeagh did not have a team of their own, so those who did hurl played with the Dungourney team of the early years of the 20th century. In the early years of the 20th century, football was more popular than hurling, and the club affiliated to the newly formed East Cork board in 1925. In 1957, Killeagh contested the East Cork Junior A hurling title for the first time but lost to a St. Catherines combination. Ten years later, in 1967, the club won the East Cork ...
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Galtee Rovers GAA
Galtee Rovers—St. Pecaun's is a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in the village of Bansha on the National Primary Route N24 in the shadow of the Galtee Mountains in west County Tipperary, Ireland. The club, founded in 1885, represents the parish of Bansha & Kilmoyler and enters gaelic football and hurling teams in the West Tipperary and Tipperary championships. The club grounds – Canon Hayes Park – are named in honour of the founder of Muntir na Tíre, Very Rev. John Canon Hayes, Parish Priest of Bansha & Kilmoyler (1946–57), who was patron of the club during his pastorship. The club pavilion is named 'The McGrath Centre' in honour of two club members, the late John & Geraldine McGrath who died on New Year's Day, 1 January 2000. John Moloney, referee of six All-Ireland Senior Finals, was President of the Galtee Rovers Club at the time of his death on 6 October 2006. In addition to his work at national level in the Gaelic Athletic Association, at club level h ...
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Brickey Rangers GAA
Brickey Rangers () is a Gaelic Athletic Association, GAA club 5 km west of Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland. They cater for Gaelic football, camogie and hurling. Their home ground is Bushy Park, which was opened in 1984. The club won the Waterford Senior Football Championship, on one occasion, in 1963. They have finished runners-up on five occasions, the last being in 1960. History Formation and development Founded in 1896 as Brickey Rangers (named for the River Brickey),https://www.clubinfo.ie/club/brickey-rangers-gfc/ the club did not have their first game until 1917. To determine the cost of a football, it was decided to go door-to-door throughout the Valley. Members of the club collected money from locals in the area. The first jersey's worn by the club were all white. The first game played by the club was against Modeligo in Dempsey's field Dungarvan GAA. The club captured their only Waterford Senior Football Championship in 1963. They have been relegated from the ...
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Blackwater Community School
Blackwater Community School () (BCS) is a co-educational, multi-denominational community school in Lismore, County Waterford, Ireland. The school offers Junior Certificate and Leaving Certificate programmes. It is the 146th public school in the county and the fourth largest school in the county by number of pupils. In 2020, BCS was ranked 367th in ''The Sunday Times'' 'Best Schools Guide Top 400'. History Blackwater Community School is an amalgamation of three local schools: Lismore CBS, Presentation Convent, Lismore and St Anne’s Secondary School, Cappoquin. It was opened in September 2003 with a student population of 400 students. The first phase of a large extension to the school, which commenced in 2021, was completed in 2022. Additional phases of development, including refurbishment of existing school buildings, were also undertaken. Extra-curricular activities Sports undertaken at the school include athletics, soccer, hurling, camogie, Gaelic football and Ladies' Gaeli ...
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North Monastery
The North Monastery ( Irish: ''An Mhainistir Thuaidh''), commonly known as The Mon, is a co-educational education campus comprising Scoil Mhuire Fatima Primary School, North Monastery Co-educational Secondary and Gaelcholáiste Mhuire AG, located at Our Lady's Mount, Cork, Ireland. History The North Monastery was founded on 9 November 1811 when Brother Jerome O'Connor and Brother John Baptist Leonard were given charge of a school in Chapel Lane by the Bishop of Cork, Rev Dr Moylan. Seventeen students attended on the first day. In 1814, a 14-acre sloping site was acquired from a wealthy Catholic businessman, Sir George Goold, Baronet, and a new school was built. The North Monastery had found its permanent home. An outbreak of typhus fever in the city in 1816 saw the school being used as a temporary hospital. Brother Griffin, a poet and novelist, became a member of the North Monastery in 1839. He died on 12 June 1840 in his 37th year. His remains are interred in the cemetery ...
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De La Salle College Waterford
De La Salle College Waterford is a secondary school in Waterford, Ireland with over 1,000 students and 90 teachers. De La Salle Teachers Training College The De La Salle Brothers had a presence in Waterford since the 1870s, and opened a teacher training college at Newtown, Waterford in 1894. In 1894 Mr. J.L. Ahearn was appointed professor of irish, the first such appointment in a teacher training college. Students who completed the two year course were awarded the National Teacher(NT) qualification entitling them to teach in primary (national) schools. In May 1939, lay teacher training ceased (male teacher training centered in St. Patrick's, Drumcondra), however, the De La Salle brothers continued to be trained for another 10 years,De La Salle College
De La Salle GAA Club
along with Marist and Presentation Brothers, in 1972 a ...
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