Rathdown School
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Rathdown School is an independent day and boarding school in
Glenageary Glenageary ( ) is an area on the Southside, Dublin, Southside of Dublin, Republic of Ireland, Ireland, within Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown. While it has no formal boundary, it is surrounded by the areas of Dalkey, Dún Laoghaire, Glasthule, Johnsto ...
,
Dublin Dublin is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. Situated on Dublin Bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, and is bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, pa ...
,
Ireland Ireland (, ; ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe. Geopolitically, the island is divided between the Republic of Ireland (officially Names of the Irish state, named Irelan ...
operating under the management of a charitable trust and with a Protestant but inclusive ethos. For most of its history an all-girls school, it became co-educational in 2023. Rathdown provides pre-school, junior and senior level education. Located on a 16-acre site, about 12 kilometres from Dublin City Centre. Rathdown is consistently ranked among the top schools in Ireland. The school's colours are blue and green.


History

Rathdown School was founded in 1973 from an amalgamation of three schools: Park House School, The Hall School and Hillcourt School, with Glengara Park School merging in 1987. The school was originally spread across three sites, in Monkstown, Glenageary and Morehampton Road in Dublin 4. In September 1974 the school consolidated at Hillcourt's site in Glenageary (although an additional branch of the Junior School continued to operate in the Morehampton Road buildings until 1978).


Park House School

Park House School was founded in Morehampton Road, Dublin 4, in 1932 by Froebel-trained Lilian Mary Rouviere Fayle. She was the daughter of Methodist leader WK Fayle, who had a hardware shop in Birr, County Offaly, and the niece of the suffragist, novelist, and playwright Susanne Rouviere Day. She was educated at Mount Mellick Quaker School and
Polam Hall School Polam Hall School is a mixed all-through school located in Darlington, County Durham, England. Polam Hall was founded as a Quaker "boarding school" for girls. It is now mixed-gender and inter-denominational but still retains its Quaker traditio ...
in Durham. Park House (named for nearby
Herbert Park Herbert Park () is the name of a road and a public park in Ballsbridge, Dublin. History The land used for the park was given to the city by the 14th Earl of Pembroke whose family name was Herbert. In 1907, the World Fair known as the Iri ...
) was a mixed school, originally set up as a preparatory school for Sandford Park, and its ethos mirrored the very progressive approach of its founder. The school pioneered judo and fencing for girls, and encouraged parents to be involved with the school and with their children's education. Jennifer Johnston was an early pupil, and her performance in the 1936 Christmas play (when she was six) was reported by the Irish Times. Mary Fayle encouraged June Fryer, later June Kuhn, to study modern dance. She introduced June as a student to Erina Brady, German-born pioneer of modern dance. When June Kuhn died in 2011, the Irish Times described her as Ireland's first modern dance performer. After Miss Fayle's death in 1946 the school was taken over by Esther and Beryl Kennedy, and on their retirement the school was bought by a group of parents of existing pupils. They appointed Mrs Cecile Catt, who had taught in the school for 12 years, as headmistress, and she remained in that role for ten years. Then, in 1973, Park House merged with The Hall School and Hillcourt to form Rathdown School. For several years Rathdown maintained a branch of its junior school in Park House's Morehampton Road buildings, but in 1978 this branch was closed, leaving the whole operation at the Glenageary site. Stella G. Mew was Principal first of Hillcourt and then of Rathdown School from 1972-2002. When she retired she took up a position as CEO of the Yeats Society.


Rathdown today

Rathdown has pupils from pre-school age (3 years) to Leaving Certificate level (up to around 18 years) and offers a broad range of academic subjects in small class groups. Rathdown provides seven-day boarding for pupils aged 10 – 18 years old and allows the boarders the option of returning home at weekends or remaining at the school to avail of the weekend activities. The school also runs a dedicated international programme for overseas students and short-term boarding options for day pupils. Rathdown is the only school in Ireland that uses a methodology called Mind Lab to develop thinking abilities and life skills through strategy games. Rathdown was the first school in Ireland where pupils used iPads in class. In 2022 the school announced that it would be becoming co-educational, and would accept boys into the junior school from September 2022, and into the senior school from September 2023, and these changes proceeded on schedule, with around one third of first years in 2023 being boys.


Governance

The school is owned by a charitable trust, Rathdown School Trust, which is led by a board of governors (who are also the charity's trustees). Its operations are overseen by a board of management, composed of four governors, two parents and two teachers, with the school head attending. Both boards delegate day-to-day leadership to the head of school.


Charity

Rathdown students participate in An Gaisce, the National Challenge Award from the President of Ireland to young people. Annually, Rathdown sends a team of students and staff to Romania, to volunteer with Habitat for Humanity Ireland to help build houses for local families. Students Unite for Children’s Health (SUCH) was created by Rathdown pupils to raise funds for charities.


Extracurricular activities


Model United Nations

For over 20 years, Rathdown School has been involved in Model United Nations (MUN), allowing the girls to build confidence in public speaking and debating as well as a lasting interest in international affairs. Rathdown was the first all-girls’ secondary school in Ireland to host an MUN Conference, RADMUN.


Sport

The school's sports facilities consist of hockey pitches, including a new, world-class, water-based hockey pitch, the Merrion Fleet Arena, tennis courts, outdoor basketball and netball courts, an indoor sports hall, athletics track and tartan cricket crease. The major winter sports are hockey and basketball and the major summer sports are tennis, athletics and cricket.


Notable alumnae

*
Anne Yeats Anne Butler Yeats (26 February 1919 – 4 July 2001) was an Irish painter, costume and stage designer. Early and family life She was the daughter of the poet William Butler Yeats and Georgie Hyde-Lees, a niece of the painter Jack Butler ...
(Hillcourt), painter, costume and designer, daughter of
William Butler Yeats William Butler Yeats (, 13 June 186528 January 1939), popularly known as W. B. Yeats, was an Irish poet, dramatist, writer, and literary critic who was one of the foremost figures of 20th century in literature, 20th-century literature. He was ...
and
Georgie Hyde-Lees Bertha Georgie Yeats (; 16 October 189223 August 1968)Michael (surname)">he He ..., a given nam .... Georgie died on 23 August 1968. References Sources * Foster, R.F. ''W.B Yeats: A Life''. Oxford University Press, 1997. * Saddlemeyer, Ann ...
. Later taught at The Hall School. * Megan Taylor (The Hall), figure skater and youngest Winter Olympics competitor, representing GB at the age of 11 (1932). * Jennifer Johnston (Park House), novelist. * Camille Souter RHA (Glengara Park), artist. *
Noelle Middleton Evelyn Noelle Woodeson (née Middleton; 18 December 1926 – 30 January 2016) was an Irish actress and one of the first BBC television announcers. She was also a leading lady of the 1950s British films. Middleton received a BAFTA Film Award no ...
(Hillcourt), actress. * Annette Jocelyn Otway-Ruthven (The Hall), medieval historian and one of the earliest female academics appointed at
Trinity College Dublin Trinity College Dublin (), officially titled The College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, and legally incorporated as Trinity College, the University of Dublin (TCD), is the sole constituent college of the Unive ...
. * Joan Hanham, Baroness Hanham (née Brownlow Spark) (Hillcourt), CBE, Mayor of Kensington and Chelsea. * Vivienne McKechnie (The Hall), poet. * Ruth Frances Long (Glengara Park and Rathdown), fantasy and romance novelist. *
Rosanna Davison Rosanna Diane Davison (born 17 April 1984) is an Irish actress, singer, writer, model and beauty queen who was crowned Miss World 2003. She is the daughter of musician Chris de Burgh, and the song "For Rosanna" was written by her father for his ...
, (Rathdown),
Miss World 2003 Miss World 2003 was the 53rd edition of the Miss World pageant, held at the Crown of Beauty Theatre in Sanya, China, on December 6, 2003. It was the first time that the Miss World pageant held in China. Azra Akın of Turkey crowned Rosanna ...
and daughter of
Chris de Burgh Christopher John Davison (born 15 October 1948), known professionally as Chris de Burgh ( ), is a British-Irish singer-songwriter and musician. He started out as an art rock performer but subsequently started writing more pop-oriented material ...
. * Virginia McGrath (née Conolly-Carew) (Rathdown), equestrian Olympian, competed in the Three-Day Event in Atlanta in 1996, and in Sydney in 2000. * Tamsen McGarry (Rathdown), alpine skier and first woman to represent Ireland at the Winter Olympics (2002). * Kirsten McGarry (Rathdown), alpine skier and first woman to represent Ireland at successive Winter Olympics (2006 and 2010). *
Saskia Tidey Saskia Tidey (born 11 June 1993 in Dublin, Ireland) is a sailor who has represented both Ireland and Great Britain in international sailing regattas. Tidey represented Ireland at the 2016 Summer Olympics in the 49er FX class. In January 201 ...
(Rathdown), sailor and Olympian (2016). * Jodie McCann (Rathdown), distance runner and Olympian (2024).


References


External links

* {{Coord, display=title Schools in Ireland