CAMPBELL COLLEGE

'Campbell College'
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Campbell College Shield.gif
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Address Belmont Rd.
Belfast
BT4 2ND
Phone (+ 44 28) 9076 3076
Fax (+ 44 28) 9076 1894
Headmaster J. A. Piggot
School type Voluntary Grammar
School Board BELB
Location Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Enrollment +1000 students
School colour(s) Black, Green, White
Motto ''Ne Obliviscaris''

'Campbell College' is a voluntary grammar school in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The College educates boys from ages 11-18. It is one of the eight Northern Irish schools represented on the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
The school occupies a 100 acre estate in east Belfast, close to the Parliament Buildings at Stormont. All the school's facilities are located on this site, which also contains a small lake and forest named Netherleigh. Campbell's junior school - formerly located on an adjacent site and called Cabin Hill - is now also located on the site. The school has the oldest Combined Cadet Force in Ireland, with 400 cadets[1]. The school has an international reputation and attracts boarders from Hong Kong, Singapore and Africa.

Contents
History
Sport
Notable alumni
Headmasters
References
External links

History


It was founded in 1894 thanks to a bequest from Henry James Campbell, who had made his fortune in the linen trade. Initially the school was primarily a boarding school but it has, particularly since the 1970s, become primarily a day school and in 2004 had 870 pupils, only about 60 of whom were boarders. Playwright and Nobel Laureate Samuel Beckett taught at the school from January to July 1928 but found the experience uncongenial. The story goes that his decision to leave prematurely was questioned by the then Headmaster who pointed out that he was giving up the opportunity to teach the cream of Ulster, Beckett replied, of Campbell's students, "Yes. Rich and thick.".[2]
In 1935 Jimmy Steele led an attempted Irish Republican Army raid on the school in an effort to secure the arms of the College Officers' Training Corps. The RUC at Strandtown were tipped-off and the raid was unsuccessful, with a gun battle taking place at the Gate Lodge on Hawthornden Road in which Constable Ian Hay received five gunshot wounds.[3] In 1936 Steele and three other IRA members were captured, prosecuted and imprisoned in Crumlin Road Gaol.[4]During World War II the school was requisitioned by the War Office as a hospital, with the pupils being transferred to Portrush on the north Antrim coast. Campbell lost 134 former students in World War I and there are separate memorials to the dead of both World Wars in the Central Hall.[5]
Both of these events were experienced firsthand by Albert Maxwell BEM, who worked for the school as groundsman and head porter for 64 years. Maxwell retired in 1993 but continued to live in the school's Grade 1 listed gate lodge until his death in 1997.
The author CS Lewis, who grew up nearby, attended the school for two months before he was withdrawn because of a serious respiratory illness and sent to Malvern (Cherbourg School), famous at the time for treating people with lung problems.[6] The gas lamppost on the school drive is claimed to have been the inspiration for that mentioned in Lewis' ''The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe''. However some sources state a lamppost in Crawfordsburn Country Park was the inspiration.[7][8]
Several Campbell students have been involved in filmmaking. These include William McQuitty (''A Night to Remember''), Andrew Eaton (''Resurrection Man''), Nick Hamm (''The Hole''), Dudi Appleton (''The Most Fertile Man in Ireland'') and Mark Huffam (''Saving Private Ryan'').
Composer David Catherwood is currently director of music at Campbell.
A collection of Lepidoptera by Thomas Workman is displayed in the school.

Sport


The school has strong record in rugby, having won the Ulster Schools Cup 26 times. In 2006 Campbell reached the final at Ravenhill, losing to Methodist College Belfast. The school has extensive sports facilities for which they have received the GoldMark Award. These include sports pitches, an astroturf hockey pitch, squash courts, a fitness suite, shooting range, and a swimming pool. The 2006 opening of the astroturf pitch was marked with an exhibition match between the gold-winning 1988 Summer Olympics Great Britain and Northern Ireland hockey team and the school's 1st XI.

Notable alumni


The cover of Keith Haines' book, 'Campbell College: a photographic history' showing an early photograph of a group of teachers at the school.


Dudi Appleton, director, screenwriter and journalist

Paul Bew, scholar and life peer

Gordon Burns, journalist and television presenter

Freeman Wills Crofts, author - was a member of the school's first class in 1894

Eric Robertson Dodds, classical scholar

William John English, Victoria Cross recipient whose medal was bequeathed to the school

Mike Gibson, rugby footballer for Cambridge University, Ireland and the British Lions

John Irvine, award-winning ITV News journalist

Charles Lawson, actor

Gary Lightbody, vocalist and guitarist in the band Snow Patrol

C.S. Lewis, author - for the autumn term of 1910 only

Tim Martin, founder of JD Wetherspoon

★ Sir John MacDermott, former Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland

Alan McFarland, former British Army officer and Ulster Unionist politician

Robert Shanks, former Chairman of the Commissioners of Irish Lights and commanding officer of HMS ''Caroline''

James Simmons, poet

Noel Thompson, BBC journalist

Headmasters



★ James "Jay" Piggot BA MA became the school's headmaster in 2005. A former pupil, Piggot is a former Assistant Master and House Master at Eton College. While at Campbell he was a member of the team that was beaten by MCB in the Ulster Schools Cup (Rugby Football). He studied at Cardiff University for a first degree in English and achieved an MA from Liverpool University. After university he taught at Millfield School as an Assistant teacher of English and Rugby coach.

★ 1987 - 2005 Robert John Ivan Pollock, BSc MEd PhD CertEd CChem MRSC

★ Brian William John Gregg Wilson MA, 1977-1987

★ Robin Milne Morgan, 1971-1976

★ Francis John Granville Cook, 1954-1971

★ Ronald Groves, 1943-1954

★ William Duff Gibbon. MA (Oxon), CBE DSO MC TD LLD was the schools headmaster between 1922 and 1943. Educated at Trinity College, Oxford, Gibbon served as a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Worcestershire Regiment during World War I. In World War II he was the Officer Commanding in the Army Cadet Force. 1922-1943

★ Robert Arthur H MacFarland, 1907-1922

★ James Adams McNeill, joint headmaster 1890-96, headmaster 1896-1907

★ Henry Richard Parker, joint headmaster 1890-1896

References


1. Hansard
2. The Cambridge Introduction to Samuel Beckett Chapter 1
3. Northern Whig 30/12/1935 Page 3 (includes photograph)
4. 'Internment' by John McGuffin (1973)
5. Haines, Keith. ''Neither rogues nor fools - a history of Campbell College''. Belfast, Campbell College, 1993.
6. C S Lewis Foundation Chronology
7. i-uk
8. visitbritain.com

External links



Official school website

Campbell College CCF Website

The Old Campbellians Society

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