Trinity Catholic College, Dunedin
Trinity Catholic College is a Catholic, state-integrated, co-educational, secondary school located at Rattray St, in City Rise, central Dunedin, New Zealand. The school was founded in 1989 as the ultimate successor of several secondary schools and one primary school. The immediate predecessor schools were Moreau College and St Edmund's boys primary school both located in South Dunedin and St Paul's High School on whose Rattray St site Trinity Catholic College was established. Trinity is the only Catholic secondary school in Dunedin and is open to enrolments from throughout the entire city. The school's proprietor is the Catholic Bishop of Dunedin.
The name Trinity Catholic College affirms the Christian belief in the Holy Trinity "which is God revealed as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, a community of love" and affirms "the Christian values and faith in God that are at the heart of the school’s mission.”
Character
The college is named after the Holy Trinity. It is a large central city co-educational school which serves the entire city of Dunedin as the only Catholic secondary school in that city. It is an integrated school with a "special character" in terms of the Private Schools Conditional Integration Act 1975. This special character is broadly the connection of the school with the Catholic faith. Preference of enrolment is given to students who have established a link with the Catholic Church through baptism or membership of a parish. Preference is decided by the appropriate parish priest in each case. A preference certificate from the student's parish is required for each student with their application for enrolment at the school. Under the Act, the school may enrol "non-preference" students but the enrolment of such students is restricted to 5% of the total roll. The College does not have an enrolment scheme which means that there is no restriction on enrolment because of a student's location of residence. The main contributing schools to the college are the Catholic parish schools of Dunedin. Enrolments come from both urban schools and rural schools.Enrolment
As of, the school had roll of students, of which identify as Māori.As of, the school had an Equity Index of, placing it amongst schools whose students have socioeconomic barriers to achievement.
Houses
The college has four houses which were set up to encourage unity and teamwork in the school. The colours and eponyms of the houses are:- Rice - Green - Edmund Ignatius Rice, founder of the Christian Brothers;
- McAuley - Blue - Catherine McAuley, founder of the Sisters of Mercy;
- Dominic - Red - St Dominic, founder of the Dominican Sisters;
- Nagle - Yellow - Nano Nagle, eighteenth-century Irish lay religious and humanitarian.
Sport
Culture and performance
The college emphasises cultural accomplishment including drama, dance, kapa haka, debating and participation in a Technical Team. A Cultural Awards ceremony is held annually to celebrate cultural achievement.Each year, all Trinity College students are given the opportunity to participate in the annual musical in the cast, in the band, or as technical crew. The musicals performed have included:
- West Side Story ;
- Fame ;
- Godspell ;
- Les Misérables ;
- The Wiz ;
- The Boy Friend ;
- Footloose ;
- Disco Inferno ;
- Jesus Christ Superstar ;
- Grease ;
- Chicago ;
- Cabaret ;
- A Dream To Share ;
- The Wizard of Oz ;
- Bugsy Malone ;
- Beauty and the Beast ;
- Annie ;
- Grease ;
- Seussical ;
- The Addams Family ;
- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat ;
- ''Back to the 80s''
Remembering
49 ex-students of the Christian Brothers died in World War II and these are all listed in a roll of honour displayed in the College..
Principals
| Name | Term | Notes | |
| 1 | Bro. Vincent Innocent Jury c.f.c. | 1989–1991 | |
| 2 | Paul Ferris | 1992–2010 | |
| 3 | Tracy O'Brien | 2010–2019 | |
| 4 | Kate Nicholson | 2019–present |
History
Foundation
In 1989,Trinity Catholic College, then named Kavanagh College, opened. It resulted from the amalgamation of Moreau College for girls and St Paul's High School for boys. The senior classes of St Edmund's School transferred to the new college. The junior classes were accommodated in Dunedin Catholic primary schools and St Edmund's School closed. The religious orders of Dominican Sisters, Christian Brothers, and the Sisters of Mercy were the teaching foundation of the amalgamation. Brother Vincent Jury cfc was appointed as the first principal of the new college. He was the last of the 23 Christian Brother Principals to exercise authority in Rattray Street in the 115 years from 1876 to 1991. The decision to end the tradition of Catholic single-sex education in Dunedin and to combine the Catholic secondary schools into a co-educational college was controversial especially in relation to senior staff appointments at the new college.Campus
The college is located on the former sites and in the former buildings of St Paul's High School, the Christian Brothers Junior School and St Dominic's College, between Rattray and Tennyson streets, these three inner-city sites being adjacent to each other. The school tennis courts are on the other side of Rattray St between that street and Elm Row. This was the old site of St Joseph's Cathedral School founded in 1862 and, since 1990, located at 43 Elm Row.Due to a lack of space, the college's junior classes were accommodated at "south site" until 1993 when a new 18 classroom block was completed at a cost of $4 million. Further redevelopment in the 1990s saw the completion of a biology laboratory in an extended science block, the construction of a new auditorium accommodating 420 people and remodelled library, music studios and offices.
In 2011, the college expanded from its restricted main site by purchasing buildings and a carpark on the opposite side of Tennyson Street from Otago Polytechnic and thus increasing the area of the college by 25%. Two of the buildings were demolished, their sites becoming a green area used for school recreation. One of the buildings was kept and used for 6 classrooms. That building had a historic connection with the important New Zealand artist Colin McCahon as that was where he was trained.