Hamblin and Porter's Grammar School

Summary

Hamblin and Porter's School was a private school in South Mall, Cork City, Ireland. Its pupils came mainly from merchant classes and Church of Ireland backgrounds. Students pursued classical subjects, with many students matriculated at Trinity College Dublin.

Daniel Hamblin's school, at 58 George's Street, Cork, was founded in 1824. Hamblin was known as a teacher preparing students for university entrance exams,[citation needed] and he also taught at the Cork Mechanics Institute. Hamblin's school moved in 1826, forming Hamblin and Porter’s boarding and day school, 73 South Mall, Cork. The premises consisted of a school-room, 2 classrooms, library, 2 dormitories, a dressing room and a playground. Sometimes the school's address was listed as Queens Street (now Father Mathew Street), off South Mall. In 1855, the school and pupils moved to 19 South Mall, to become the Collegiate School under Francis William Newell.[1]

Hamblin was made a freeman of Cork City.

Classical subjects were taught. A report card for a pupil grades him in Greek Testament, Lucian, Homer, Xenophon, Latin, Terence, Juvenal, Livy, Virgil, Horace, Exercise, Euclid (Geometry), Algebra, History and Writing.[2]

Past pupils edit

Notable pupils include, physician Robert Spencer Dyer Lyons, Home Rule MP Joseph Philip Ronayne, balladeer, writer and nationalist Denny Lane,[2] mathematician, theologian and Trinity provost George Salmon DD, FRS,[3] and surgeon and professor Edward Hallaran Bennett MD.

Victoria Cross winner James Adams, archbishop of Ontario John Lewis,[4] and clergymen Adam Newman Beamish and Richard Parkes Bennett are among the Church of Ireland clergy who attended the school.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ The Irish Historic Towns Atlas -Cork Archived 2013-05-03 at the Wayback Machine Draft gazetteer of topographical information, Royal Irish Academy, 27 July 2012
  2. ^ a b Denny Lane Papers Cork Archives Institute.
  3. ^ Lecture : Life and Work of Provost George Salmon FRS(1819-1904) by Roderick Gow, 6 April 2005.
  4. ^ "Bishop John Travers Lewis". Archived from the original on 14 September 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2012.