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Stonyhurst Saint Mary's Hall

Stonyhurst St Mary's Hall (commonly known as S.M.H.) is the preparatory school to Stonyhurst College. It is an independent co-educational Catholic school, for ages 3–13, founded by the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). It is primarily a day school but has some boarders. As the lineal descendant of Hodder Place the school lays claim to be the oldest preparatory school in the country.[1]

Stonyhurst College
Latin: Aula Sanctae Mariae
Location
Clitheroe, Lancashire, England BB7 9PU
Coordinates53°50′49″N 2°28′19″W / 53.847°N 2.472°W / 53.847; -2.472
Information
TypePrivate day and boarding
MottoQuant Je Puis
(As much as I can)
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic (Jesuit)
Established1807; 217 years ago (1807) (as Hodder Place)
1946 (as Saint Mary's Hall)
Department for Education URN119825 Tables
HeadmasterChristopher Cann
GenderCoeducational, since 1997
Age3 to 13
Number of students240~
Colour(s)Green, White
  
LinesCampion, St Omers, Shireburn, Weld
Affiliated schoolStonyhurst College
DioceseSalford
Patron saintBlessed Virgin Mary
Websitesaintmaryshall.com

It is adjacent to Stonyhurst College, outside the small village of Hurst Green, near Clitheroe in Lancashire, England.

History edit

Jesuit College edit

 
SMH logo, introduced in 2010

Stonyhurst College was founded in 1593 as the English Jesuit College at St Omers in present-day France, at a time when Catholic education was prohibited by law in England. Having moved to Bruges in 1762 and then Liège in 1773, due to the persecution of the Jesuit order which ran the school, it finally settled at Stonyhurst in 1794. An attempt had been made to found a preparatory school to the college at St Omers, which would have been based in Boulogne, but this was abandoned and ultimately thwarted by the expulsion of the Jesuits from France in 1762.[2] In 1768 new buildings were erected for a preparatory school at Bruges; this 'Little College' was closed in 1775, two years after the migration of the college to Liège.[3] Thirteen years after the settlement in England the preparatory school was finally established in 1807.[4]

 
Hodder Place, former Jesuit novitiate and preparatory school

Hodder Place edit

The Stonyhurst Estate donated by an old boy of the college at St Omers, Thomas Weld, included the Shireburn family Hall and a large building on the edge of the River Hodder, Hodder Place. The latter opened as a Jesuit novitiate when the Jesuits were formally re-established in Britain in 1803. Four years later, preparatory, the youngest pupils in the school, which had settled in the Hall, were transferred to Hodder Place. It was not until 1855, however, that the preparatory school was formally opened. The building underwent extension in 1836 and again in 1869 when two towers were constructed on either side.[5]

Hodder Place continued to function as the preparatory school to the college until 1970 when it was shut and converted into residential flats. A rugby pitch still remains adjacent to the building and is very occasionally used today by St Mary's Hall both for sports and, during the summer, as a campsite for boarding pupils, under the supervision of the boarding staff.

St Mary's Hall edit

 
SMH from across the sports pitches
 
Gerard Manley Hopkins

Between 1828 and 1830, a new building in Georgian style was constructed closer to the college and opened as the new novitiate, St Mary's Hall. In the nineteenth century, the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins trained as a priest there, and in the twentieth century John Tolkien, son of J.R.R. Tolkien, also trained there.

The building was extended with two symmetrical wings on either side in the 1850s when the symmetry of the college's south front was also finally completed.

St Mary's Hall continued to function as a seminary until 1926 when the seminarians were moved to Heythrop Hall in Oxfordshire. The building lay derelict until the English College moved in for the duration of the War. After their return to Rome, Figures Playroom was transferred from the college to St Mary's Hall, which opened as a middle school to Stonyhurst in 1946. When Hodder Place was closed in 1970, the pupils were moved across to St Mary's Hall to form Hodder Playroom. As successor to Hodder Place, SMH has a claim to be the oldest surviving preparatory school in Britain.[1]

Since the addition of wings and the chapel extension in the nineteenth century, the buildings of St Mary's Hall changed comparatively little, except due to extensive fire damage in the 1980s, which destroyed much of the building's wooden panelling. In 1993, as part of the Stonyhurst Centenaries, celebrating the four-hundredth anniversary of the school's founding and the two-hundredth anniversary of its settlement at Stonyhurst the year later, a new state-of-the-art theatre was built in the grounds, the Centenaries Theatre. Since then, the old theatre has been transformed into a new entrance and library, and, with the transition to co-education in 1997, girls' dormitories have been created in the old craft, design, and technology attic, and new changing facilities for girls created at the back of the Sports Hall.[1]

Hodder House edit

In 2004, the old gymnasium was converted into new Foundation Stage and KS1 facility, and named Hodder House. It educates children ages 3–7, making it now possible to undergo fifteen years of education at Stonyhurst.

Rebranding edit

Until 2007, SMH was officially known as "St Mary's Hall, Stonyhurst". The new Headmaster of the college, Andrew Johnson, insisted that a new name was necessary to bring the Stonyhurst campus closer together; SMH is now officially known as "Stonyhurst St Mary's Hall".[6]

Religious life edit

 
The Chapel at St Mary's Hall

St Mary's Hall is a Roman Catholic school, overseen by the Jesuit order. As such, the Jesuit ethos pervades the life of the school, with emphasis upon spiritual development, reasoning skills, and the creation of Men and Women for Others.[7]

Mass is celebrated for the whole school on feast days, prayers are said at morning assembly, and night prayers in the chapel bring the day to a close. Charity is encouraged through the observance of CAFOD lunches, where money saved from simplifying the menu is given to charity, and through the school's own charity "Children for Children". Each year St Mary's Hall plays host to the "Stonyhurst Children's Holiday Trust" week, when children with disabilities or from disadvantaged backgrounds are looked after by senior pupils from the college.

St Mary's Hall has its own chapel where Mass is said, as well as the Stations of the Cross during Lent and the Rosary throughout October and May. A portable altar also enables the Centenaries Theatre to be used for school Masses.

Religious iconography is present throughout the school. A statue of the Sacred Heart, restored by the College stonemason in 2008, stands atop the entrance to the old Jesuit escape tunnel in the garden; a statue of Mary and a mosaic altar occupy a position beneath the main staircase in the hallway; there is a grotto beside the stone steps adjacent to the building, where night prayers are said during the Summer Term; and there are statues in the playrooms and crosses in every classroom and dormitory.

It is a long-standing tradition for pupils to write "May Verses". These are poems written in honour of Mary, Mother of Jesus. During the month of May they adorn the school's main staircase. Since the opening of Hodder House in 2004, the nativity, performed by the youngest members of the school, has become an annual fixture on the calendar.

As at the college, pupils write AMDG in the top, left-hand corner of any piece of work they do. It stands for the Latin phrase Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam which means "To the Greater Glory of God". At the end of a piece of work they write L.D.S. in the centre of the page. It stands for Laus Deo Semper which means "Praise be to God Always". These are both traditional Jesuit mottoes.

Religious Education is compulsory for all pupils at the school.

School organisation edit

The playroom system edit

Unlike most English public schools, Stonyhurst is organised horizontally by year groups (known as playrooms) rather than vertically by houses. Each playroom has an assigned playroom master, with each cohort moving through the playrooms, having a sequence of playroom masters (rather than being allocated into a house with housemaster for their whole time in the college, as happens in other schools).

Hodder House

  • Pre-Nursery (2–3)
  • Nursery (3–4)
  • Pre-Prep (4–5)
  • PP 1 (5–6)
  • PP 2 (6–7)

Preparatory Playroom

  • Lower Preparatory ('Lower Prep', 7–8)
  • Upper Preparatory ('Upper Prep', 8–9)

Elements Playroom (formerly Hodder Playroom along with Preparatory)

  • Lower Elements (9–10)
  • Upper Elements (10–11)

Figures Playroom

  • Figures (11–12)

Rudiments Playroom

  • Rudiments ('Ruds', 12–13)[8]

Lines edit

 
Stonyhurst Park Cross.

In addition to the playrooms, there is also a system which cuts through the year groups, the "Lines", which are used mostly for sports and competitions. The Lines and colours are as follows:

  • Campion (Red) (after St Edmund Campion)
  • St Omers (Yellow, though some brown rugby shirts as yellow shows too much dirt) (after St Omer, the French town where the school was founded)
  • Shireburn (Green) (after the Shireburn family that built Stonyhurst Hall)
  • Weld (Blue) (after the Weld family that donated Stonyhurst)

Pupils remain in the same Line throughout their time at the school, and if their parents, older siblings, or grandparents etc. were also pupils, automatically enter the same Line

Prefects edit

St Mary's Hall has a head boy and head girl, whose responsibilities include showing round prospective parents, and speech-giving. Various duties are also assigned to a staff-elected committee of Rudiments pupils.

Discipline edit

At St Mary's Hall, behaviour is typically rewarded or punished through the use of "Line Cards". Each pupil carries their card at all times. It is signed on the left-hand side with a brief explanation by the teacher as a punishment, or "debit". It is signed on the right-hand side with an explanation as a reward or "credit". The cards are coloured according to Line membership. The total number of credits and debits, in part, determines which line is awarded a special Line Supper.

Line points are allotted for academic work and also contribute to the Line Supper allocation.

As at the college, the most severe punishment is permanent expulsion, and below that, temporary suspension.[9]

Uniform edit

  • Boys wear grey shorts and grey knee-length socks (except Rudiments and Figures who wear trousers), white shirt, green tie, green jumper, and green blazers.
  • Girls wear white blouses, green ties, green jumpers, green blazers and skirts in the college tartan, known as Lady Borrowdale's gift and based on a fragment of tartan worn by Bonnie Prince Charlie on his journey from Culloden across to Skye. This was also worn on Queen Elizabeth II's visit to the college in 1990.[10]

Special ties are awarded for excellence in sport or for other achievements. Rudiments wear special ties with the school emblem repeated. Furthermore, the committee wear similar ties with red sections.

Academic edit

Academic standards are high, owing in part to small classes, of usually no more than fifteen.

In Rudiments, pupils sit the Common Entrance and/or the 11+ Scholarship examinations in preparation for entry to the College. The Common Entrance examinations were only a recent addition to the school. Before that, pupils leaving St Mary's Hall took the Stonyhurst entrance exams, which were internally set.

Extra curricular edit

As at the College, St Mary's Hall follows a broad-based curriculum, encouraging participation in a range of activities including sport, music, drama, and art.

Drama edit

Drama classes are compulsory at St Mary's Hall, where additional classes may be taken in preparation for LAMDA examinations and entry into the Blackburn Festival. Plays are a regular fixture on the calendar, as are dramatic performances by pupils at the "Friday Presentations", when the school gathers on a Friday evening to be entertained by a talk or production in the Centenaries Theatre. Each year, the staff also stage the school pantomime; pupils are asked to gather in the theatre under the guise of a "staff announcement".[6]

The Ark edit

SMH had until recently a small, rare-breeds farm with pigs, hens, rabbits, sheep, fish, and birds. Known as "The Ark", it was looked after by the children, under the supervision of staff. The Ark was closed due to animal welfare concerns.

Alumni edit

Notable Alumni:

Headmasters edit

Hodder Place edit

St Mary's Hall edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "History" (PDF). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  2. ^ Digital object identifier – Cookie Absent
  3. ^ TE Muir, Stonyhurst second edition 2006, p.195
  4. ^ A Stonyhurst Handbook for Visitors and Others, third edition 1963
  5. ^ A Stonyhurst Handbook for Visitors and Others, third edition 1963, p.37
  6. ^ a b "Key Stages". Stonyhurst. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  7. ^ "Men for Others". onlineministries.creighton.edu. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  8. ^ "Playrooms". Stonyhurst. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  9. ^ "Behavior policy" (PDF). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  10. ^ General News 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ This is Lancashire. Retrieved 31 December 2008
  12. ^ This is Lancashire. Retrieved 31 December 2008
  13. ^ "World Cup hero Will's close shave with fame". Lancashire Telegraph. 12 December 2007.

External links edit

stonyhurst, saint, mary, hall, stonyhurst, mary, hall, commonly, known, preparatory, school, stonyhurst, college, independent, educational, catholic, school, ages, founded, society, jesus, jesuits, primarily, school, some, boarders, lineal, descendant, hodder,. Stonyhurst St Mary s Hall commonly known as S M H is the preparatory school to Stonyhurst College It is an independent co educational Catholic school for ages 3 13 founded by the Society of Jesus Jesuits It is primarily a day school but has some boarders As the lineal descendant of Hodder Place the school lays claim to be the oldest preparatory school in the country 1 Stonyhurst CollegeLatin Aula Sanctae MariaeLocationClitheroe Lancashire England BB7 9PUCoordinates53 50 49 N 2 28 19 W 53 847 N 2 472 W 53 847 2 472InformationTypePrivate day and boardingMottoQuant Je Puis As much as I can Religious affiliation s Roman Catholic Jesuit Established1807 217 years ago 1807 as Hodder Place 1946 as Saint Mary s Hall Department for Education URN119825 TablesHeadmasterChristopher CannGenderCoeducational since 1997Age3 to 13Number of students240 Colour s Green White LinesCampion St Omers Shireburn WeldAffiliated schoolStonyhurst CollegeDioceseSalfordPatron saintBlessed Virgin MaryWebsitesaintmaryshall comIt is adjacent to Stonyhurst College outside the small village of Hurst Green near Clitheroe in Lancashire England Contents 1 History 1 1 Jesuit College 1 2 Hodder Place 1 3 St Mary s Hall 1 4 Hodder House 1 5 Rebranding 2 Religious life 3 School organisation 3 1 The playroom system 3 2 Lines 3 3 Prefects 3 4 Discipline 3 5 Uniform 4 Academic 5 Extra curricular 5 1 Drama 5 2 The Ark 6 Alumni 7 Headmasters 7 1 Hodder Place 7 2 St Mary s Hall 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editJesuit College edit nbsp SMH logo introduced in 2010See also College of St Omer See also Stonyhurst College Stonyhurst College was founded in 1593 as the English Jesuit College at St Omers in present day France at a time when Catholic education was prohibited by law in England Having moved to Bruges in 1762 and then Liege in 1773 due to the persecution of the Jesuit order which ran the school it finally settled at Stonyhurst in 1794 An attempt had been made to found a preparatory school to the college at St Omers which would have been based in Boulogne but this was abandoned and ultimately thwarted by the expulsion of the Jesuits from France in 1762 2 In 1768 new buildings were erected for a preparatory school at Bruges this Little College was closed in 1775 two years after the migration of the college to Liege 3 Thirteen years after the settlement in England the preparatory school was finally established in 1807 4 nbsp Hodder Place former Jesuit novitiate and preparatory schoolHodder Place edit The Stonyhurst Estate donated by an old boy of the college at St Omers Thomas Weld included the Shireburn family Hall and a large building on the edge of the River Hodder Hodder Place The latter opened as a Jesuit novitiate when the Jesuits were formally re established in Britain in 1803 Four years later preparatory the youngest pupils in the school which had settled in the Hall were transferred to Hodder Place It was not until 1855 however that the preparatory school was formally opened The building underwent extension in 1836 and again in 1869 when two towers were constructed on either side 5 Hodder Place continued to function as the preparatory school to the college until 1970 when it was shut and converted into residential flats A rugby pitch still remains adjacent to the building and is very occasionally used today by St Mary s Hall both for sports and during the summer as a campsite for boarding pupils under the supervision of the boarding staff St Mary s Hall edit nbsp SMH from across the sports pitches nbsp Gerard Manley HopkinsBetween 1828 and 1830 a new building in Georgian style was constructed closer to the college and opened as the new novitiate St Mary s Hall In the nineteenth century the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins trained as a priest there and in the twentieth century John Tolkien son of J R R Tolkien also trained there The building was extended with two symmetrical wings on either side in the 1850s when the symmetry of the college s south front was also finally completed St Mary s Hall continued to function as a seminary until 1926 when the seminarians were moved to Heythrop Hall in Oxfordshire The building lay derelict until the English College moved in for the duration of the War After their return to Rome Figures Playroom was transferred from the college to St Mary s Hall which opened as a middle school to Stonyhurst in 1946 When Hodder Place was closed in 1970 the pupils were moved across to St Mary s Hall to form Hodder Playroom As successor to Hodder Place SMH has a claim to be the oldest surviving preparatory school in Britain 1 Since the addition of wings and the chapel extension in the nineteenth century the buildings of St Mary s Hall changed comparatively little except due to extensive fire damage in the 1980s which destroyed much of the building s wooden panelling In 1993 as part of the Stonyhurst Centenaries celebrating the four hundredth anniversary of the school s founding and the two hundredth anniversary of its settlement at Stonyhurst the year later a new state of the art theatre was built in the grounds the Centenaries Theatre Since then the old theatre has been transformed into a new entrance and library and with the transition to co education in 1997 girls dormitories have been created in the old craft design and technology attic and new changing facilities for girls created at the back of the Sports Hall 1 Hodder House edit In 2004 the old gymnasium was converted into new Foundation Stage and KS1 facility and named Hodder House It educates children ages 3 7 making it now possible to undergo fifteen years of education at Stonyhurst Rebranding edit Until 2007 SMH was officially known as St Mary s Hall Stonyhurst The new Headmaster of the college Andrew Johnson insisted that a new name was necessary to bring the Stonyhurst campus closer together SMH is now officially known as Stonyhurst St Mary s Hall 6 Religious life edit nbsp The Chapel at St Mary s HallSt Mary s Hall is a Roman Catholic school overseen by the Jesuit order As such the Jesuit ethos pervades the life of the school with emphasis upon spiritual development reasoning skills and the creation of Men and Women for Others 7 Mass is celebrated for the whole school on feast days prayers are said at morning assembly and night prayers in the chapel bring the day to a close Charity is encouraged through the observance of CAFOD lunches where money saved from simplifying the menu is given to charity and through the school s own charity Children for Children Each year St Mary s Hall plays host to the Stonyhurst Children s Holiday Trust week when children with disabilities or from disadvantaged backgrounds are looked after by senior pupils from the college St Mary s Hall has its own chapel where Mass is said as well as the Stations of the Cross during Lent and the Rosary throughout October and May A portable altar also enables the Centenaries Theatre to be used for school Masses Religious iconography is present throughout the school A statue of the Sacred Heart restored by the College stonemason in 2008 stands atop the entrance to the old Jesuit escape tunnel in the garden a statue of Mary and a mosaic altar occupy a position beneath the main staircase in the hallway there is a grotto beside the stone steps adjacent to the building where night prayers are said during the Summer Term and there are statues in the playrooms and crosses in every classroom and dormitory It is a long standing tradition for pupils to write May Verses These are poems written in honour of Mary Mother of Jesus During the month of May they adorn the school s main staircase Since the opening of Hodder House in 2004 the nativity performed by the youngest members of the school has become an annual fixture on the calendar As at the college pupils write AMDG in the top left hand corner of any piece of work they do It stands for the Latin phrase Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam which means To the Greater Glory of God At the end of a piece of work they write L D S in the centre of the page It stands for Laus Deo Semper which means Praise be to God Always These are both traditional Jesuit mottoes Religious Education is compulsory for all pupils at the school See also Religious life at Stonyhurst College See also Charities of Stonyhurst CollegeSchool organisation editThe playroom system edit Unlike most English public schools Stonyhurst is organised horizontally by year groups known as playrooms rather than vertically by houses Each playroom has an assigned playroom master with each cohort moving through the playrooms having a sequence of playroom masters rather than being allocated into a house with housemaster for their whole time in the college as happens in other schools Hodder House Pre Nursery 2 3 Nursery 3 4 Pre Prep 4 5 PP 1 5 6 PP 2 6 7 Preparatory Playroom Lower Preparatory Lower Prep 7 8 Upper Preparatory Upper Prep 8 9 Elements Playroom formerly Hodder Playroom along with Preparatory Lower Elements 9 10 Upper Elements 10 11 Figures Playroom Figures 11 12 Rudiments Playroom Rudiments Ruds 12 13 8 Lines edit nbsp Stonyhurst Park Cross In addition to the playrooms there is also a system which cuts through the year groups the Lines which are used mostly for sports and competitions The Lines and colours are as follows Campion Red after St Edmund Campion St Omers Yellow though some brown rugby shirts as yellow shows too much dirt after St Omer the French town where the school was founded Shireburn Green after the Shireburn family that built Stonyhurst Hall Weld Blue after the Weld family that donated Stonyhurst Pupils remain in the same Line throughout their time at the school and if their parents older siblings or grandparents etc were also pupils automatically enter the same Line Prefects edit St Mary s Hall has a head boy and head girl whose responsibilities include showing round prospective parents and speech giving Various duties are also assigned to a staff elected committee of Rudiments pupils Discipline edit At St Mary s Hall behaviour is typically rewarded or punished through the use of Line Cards Each pupil carries their card at all times It is signed on the left hand side with a brief explanation by the teacher as a punishment or debit It is signed on the right hand side with an explanation as a reward or credit The cards are coloured according to Line membership The total number of credits and debits in part determines which line is awarded a special Line Supper Line points are allotted for academic work and also contribute to the Line Supper allocation As at the college the most severe punishment is permanent expulsion and below that temporary suspension 9 Uniform edit Boys wear grey shorts and grey knee length socks except Rudiments and Figures who wear trousers white shirt green tie green jumper and green blazers Girls wear white blouses green ties green jumpers green blazers and skirts in the college tartan known as Lady Borrowdale s gift and based on a fragment of tartan worn by Bonnie Prince Charlie on his journey from Culloden across to Skye This was also worn on Queen Elizabeth II s visit to the college in 1990 10 Special ties are awarded for excellence in sport or for other achievements Rudiments wear special ties with the school emblem repeated Furthermore the committee wear similar ties with red sections Academic editAcademic standards are high owing in part to small classes of usually no more than fifteen In Rudiments pupils sit the Common Entrance and or the 11 Scholarship examinations in preparation for entry to the College The Common Entrance examinations were only a recent addition to the school Before that pupils leaving St Mary s Hall took the Stonyhurst entrance exams which were internally set Extra curricular editAs at the College St Mary s Hall follows a broad based curriculum encouraging participation in a range of activities including sport music drama and art Drama edit Drama classes are compulsory at St Mary s Hall where additional classes may be taken in preparation for LAMDA examinations and entry into the Blackburn Festival Plays are a regular fixture on the calendar as are dramatic performances by pupils at the Friday Presentations when the school gathers on a Friday evening to be entertained by a talk or production in the Centenaries Theatre Each year the staff also stage the school pantomime pupils are asked to gather in the theatre under the guise of a staff announcement 6 The Ark edit SMH had until recently a small rare breeds farm with pigs hens rabbits sheep fish and birds Known as The Ark it was looked after by the children under the supervision of staff The Ark was closed due to animal welfare concerns Alumni editMain article List of Stonyhurst alumni Notable Alumni George Archer Shee Hodder Place alumnus cause celebre his case was the inspiration for the play The Winslow Boy by Terence Rattigan 11 Patrick Baladi actor Iain Balshaw rugby player and Rugby World Cup winner Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Hodder Place alumnus author of Sherlock Holmes 12 Will Greenwood rugby player whose mother taught mathematics at SMH until 2007 13 Vyvyan Holland Hodder Place alumnus younger son of Oscar Wilde Headmasters editHodder Place edit Superiors 1856 George Lambert SJ 1857 George Tickell SJ 1858 John Laurenson 1865 Francis Brownbill SJ 1869 Matthew Newsham SJ 1875 Walter Bridge SJ 1876 Francis Cassidy SJ 1878 William Kerr SJ 1880 Francis Scholes SJ 1882 William Burns SJ 1884 Charles Clarke SJ 1885 Francis Cassidy SJ 1916 Edward King SJ 1916 Walter Weld SJ 1925 Aloysius Parkinson SJ 1927 Leo Belton SJ 1939 Hubert McEvoy SJ 1942 9 Walter Weld SJ Ministers 1949 Oswald Fishwick SJ 1959 John Firth SJHeadmasters 1965 Denis Unsworth 1968 Mr Earle 1970 Rob Sinclair 1971 John Mallinson St Mary s Hall edit Ministers 1946 Dermot Whyte SJ 1948 Philip Prime SJ 1954 William Maher SJ 1959 Anthony Powell SJ Headmasters 1965 R Vaughan Rigby OS 1968 Rae Carter 1978 Peter Anwyl 1990 Rory O Brien 1999 Michael Higgins 2004 Laurence Crouch 2014 Ian Murphy 2022 Fr Christopher Cann nbsp A classroom at SMH 2003 nbsp The Centenaries Theatre 2003 nbsp The small farm at SMH The Ark 2003 nbsp The sports pitch at Hodder Place 2003See also editStonyhurst Estate College of St Omer List of Stonyhurst Alumni ae Charities of Stonyhurst College St Ignatius founder of the Jesuits List of Jesuit sites in the United Kingdom List of Jesuit schoolsReferences edit a b c History PDF Retrieved 30 May 2017 Digital object identifier Cookie Absent TE Muir Stonyhurst second edition 2006 p 195 A Stonyhurst Handbook for Visitors and Others third edition 1963 A Stonyhurst Handbook for Visitors and Others third edition 1963 p 37 a b Key Stages Stonyhurst Retrieved 30 May 2017 Men for Others onlineministries creighton edu Retrieved 30 May 2017 Playrooms Stonyhurst Retrieved 30 May 2017 Behavior policy PDF Retrieved 30 May 2017 General News Archived 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine This is Lancashire Retrieved 31 December 2008 This is Lancashire Retrieved 31 December 2008 World Cup hero Will s close shave with fame Lancashire Telegraph 12 December 2007 External links editSchool Website Virtual tour of SMH Stonyhurst Profile on the ISC Independent Schools Inspectorate Inspection Reports Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stonyhurst Saint Mary 27s Hall amp oldid 1218257100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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