Ignatius Park College

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Ignatius Park College
Location
,
Australia
19°18′01″S 146°45′26″E / 19.3002°S 146.7572°E / -19.3002; 146.7572
Information
Typeaffiliated secondary school
MottoSeek Truth
Religious affiliation
Roman Catholicism
DenominationCongregation of Christian Brothers
Established1969 (1969)
FounderCongregation of Christian Brothers
St Margret Mary's College
TrustEdmund Rice Education Australia
Principal
Luke Thompson
ChaplainRod Ward
Years offered
712
GenderBoys
Enrolmentc.1000
Websitewww.ipc.qld.edu.au

Ignatius Park College (IPC/Iggy Park) is an independent Catholic secondary school for boys with a sister school in St Marrgret Mary College, located in Townsville, Queensland, Australia. The school is affiliated with Edmund Rice Education Australia network that operates under the direction of the Congregation of Christian Brothers.[1] The school was established in 1969 at its current location in Cranbrook, though it was built as a successor school to Our Lady's Mount, the former Catholic boys' secondary that was located in Stanton Hill.[2] The college has a student population of ~1000 boys from Years 7 to 12. Ignatius Park College releases a newsletter every 2 weeks, you can see the latest and all archived by going to Source 16.

House System

Like many other Australian schools, Ignatius Park College is built upon a system of houses. At Ignatius Park there are seven houses. These are: Baillie House, Carew House, Nolan House, Putney House, Reid House, Rice House and Treacy House. Every house has 6 years levels 7-12 with each house having one class per year level. At the start only 5 houses were present however over the years more have been introduced with the latest being the Putney House in 2014.[1]

Some Houses have other names, such as: The Putney Silverbacks, The Nolan Lions, The Treacy Tigers and The Baillie Bears. Each house has quirks and many unique aspects that make them different, along with what event each house performs better in.[1]

The Baillie House logo

Baillie House

The Baillie House was named after Br Leonard Loyal Baillie (1919-1984). The Baillie house colour is 'Blue' and their house motto is "Rip into It".[3]

Br Ballie was born in Mackay in 1919 and came from a large catholic family if eight boys. He spent three years as an apprentice tailor, before running away from home at 19 to go to Sydney to become a Christian Brother. Br Baillie began teaching in Balmain in 1944 and three years later was transferred to Our Lady's Mount on Stanton Hill in Townsville. After spending two years in Townsville, Br Baillie moved to Ingham to help establish Cardinal Gilroy Cllage but then returned as the 'Abbot' of St John Fisher, where he acted as both Principal and Superior of the community. Throughout the following years, Br Baillie taught in various locations including Brisbane and Papua New Guinea before retiring to Townsville. After battling some ill health, he passed away in 1984.[3]

The ideals of the Baillie House are based on Br Baillie's spirt of developing and maintaining strong relationships, as well as understanding the importance of family, respecting others and working hard.[3]

The Carew House logo

Carew House

The Carew House was named after Paddy Carew (1922-2002). The Carew House colour is 'Maroon', and their house motto is "Effort Every Time". The Carew House was founded in 2005 in the memory of Paddy Carew. Paddy Carew also has the Paddy Carew Shield which each year every house competes to win, the shield is the overall placements every house receives in every event along with academic achievement and behavior and effort students have in the classroom. [4]

Paddy Carew was an Irishman and was a Golden Gloves Boxer in Ireland. Paddy left Dublin in 1944 to teach in London and migrated to Australia with his wife, Elieen in 1963 where they had five sons. Paddy started teaching at IPC in 1970, six months after the school opened and remained active at the school right up till his death in 2002. He is remembered as always looking out for the student who was battling (fighting) and was a much-loved member of the IPC community. He was a man of faith who appreciated sport, academia, family values, good times and, most of all people. [4]

The objective of the Carew House is to follow the values and efforts of Paddy Carew and appreciate things and enjoy friendships. They believe that doing so will create an environment that Paddy and his family would be proud of.[4]

The Nolan House Logo

Nolan House

The Nolan House was named after Br Patrick Wilfred Nolan (1877-1938). The Nolan house colour is 'Gold/Yellow' and their house motto is "Unleash the Fury".[5]

Br Nolan was born in Ireland and worked some years before becoming a Christian Brother. he came to Australia in 1901 to teach in the first Christian Brother's School in Fremantle. It is remembered that Br Nolan was a careful and methodical teacher who was strict but kind and considerate. After ten years, he was appointed the first headmaster of Our Lady's Mount, Stanton Hill, Townsville.[5]

He was later in charge of several schools in Queensland including St Laurence's, South Brisbane and Mount Carmel College, Charters Towers.[5]

The Putney House logo

Putney House

The Putney House named after Sir Bishop Micheal Putney (1946-2014). Sir Bishop Micheal Putney blessed Ignatius Park College grounds on March 16th, 1969.[6] In 2014 the year of his passing the Putney house was created in his honour, not t as the first old boy of the Christian brothers in Townsville to be appointed as a catholic priest. the Putney House colour is 'Silver' with their house motto "Patience, Presence, Passion". Bishop Putney also has a road in Townsville named after him.

Bishop Putney was ordained a priest in 1969 and worked in parishes in the Archdiocese if Brisbane, before furthering his studies in Rome. Bishop Putney became an Auxiliary Bishop in Brisbane in 1995 and was appointed the bishop of the Townsville Diocese in 2001. Bishop Putney formed significant relationships with a wide range of people in Townsville and these relationships war a wonderful example to the IPC community of the power that can come from relationships based on trust and mutual respect. [7]

The motto of the Putney House "Patience, Presence, Passion", stems from the personal qualities Sir Bishop Micheal Putney was renowned for.[7]

The Reid House logo

Reid House

The Reid House was named after Br Douglas Herman Reid (1923-2000). The Reid house colour is 'Red' and their motto is "Do the little things well".[8]

The Reid House is one of the first five foundation houses in the IPC Pastoral system. It's namesake Br Douglas Herman Reid was born in South Townsville and was the first Principle of Ignatius Park College and an old boy of Our Lady's Mount. In addition to being he founding Principle, Br Reid was also a Superior and teacher of Senior Subjects. A hard-working and dedicated man, Douglas' determination to fulfill his role was inspirational. [8]

The Reid House drew it's spirt from Br Reid, there is an emphasis on participation and a holistic approach to life at Ignatius Park College. The successes of the House are always attributed to this spirt of hard work and effort.[8]

The Rice House logo

Rice House

The Rice House was named after Edmund Rice (1762-1844) who was the founder of the Christian Brothers. The Rice house colour is 'Green' and their house motto is "Have a Dig".[9]

The Rice House is named for the founder of the Congregation of Christian Brothers who established Ignatius Park College. The Rice house was one of the five foundational houses at IPC. All boys are supported and encouraged to do their best in all aspects of school life. Participating in classrooms, stage performance and sports. It is a point that result does not matter only effort. The ideals of the House are based on the 'old fashioned' values of being polite and well-mannered with a strong work ethic. Those in the Rice House have a responsibility like the rest of school to uphold the reputation of the College. [9]

The Treacy House logo

Treacy House

The Treacy House was named after Br Patrick Ambrose Treacy (1834-1912). The Treacy House colour is White and their motto is " Respect All, Fear None".[10]

Br Patrick Treacy was the leader of a team of Brothers who came out to Australia from Ireland in 1868. Br Treacy joined the Brothers and taught first in Wexford, specializing in Mathematics and Navigation. As a Superior, he was appointed to lead the band of brothers who opened the Melbourne mission in 1868. In 1871, Br Treacy opened the Mother House of the Australian Foundation at Victoria Parade, Melbourne. [10]

He opened the first brothers' school in Queensland, established first in Elizabeth Street, Brisbane and then moving to a site on Gregory Terrace, to become St Joseph's College. In 1876, Br Treacy established the brothers in Dunedin, New Zealand. Br Treacy died at St Joseph's Gregory Terrace in 1912 and is buried in the brothers' plot in Nudgee Cemetery. That the Brothers' Australian venture went on to be an outstanding success, is no small measure due to the untiring efforts if Brother Patrick Ambrose Treacy. [10]

Facilities

Ignatius Park College has over 40 pianos and 20 guitars, with the combined music room worth around $100,000. It has around ten computer labs for student use. The Edmund Rice Hall is used for assemblies, special events and community use. Ignatius Park is one of a handful of schools in Queensland with a 50-metre Olympic swimming pool.

Over the last years starting in 2024, Ignatius Park College has updated many classrooms, rebuilt state of the art science labs, rebuild the area known as the quad as well as plans to continue development. (09/06/2026)[11]

Big Ben

Big Ben

Big Ben is a section of the College where smaller assemblies are held. Typically, 1 year level. It is a large open room with rows of chairs that are staggered upwards. The room is air conditioned, has a large project, white board and sound system including a microphone. [1]

Gym

The gym at IPC

Ignatius Park has a gym located in the John Fisher Building, available for senior training classes and is often used by many different people across grades when open for full school use during breaks. Containing many well-maintained exercise equipment, it has anything needed for proper exercise. [1]

Pool

Ignatius Park college is one of a few schools that have a 50-meter-long swimming pool. It is used for swim classes, and the swimming carnival. Hire of the pool can be arranged by emailing the College . [12]

The Pool at Ignatius Park

As of 12/06/26 the IPC pool is currently under renovation after many decades of service.[1]

Learning Resource Centre (LRC)

The Waterford Place Learning Resource Centre is the replacement to the old library. It opened in 2022 to the entire school, it boasts two stories with many rooms, and purposes.[13]

The front of the LRC

Contained within the LRC is Mount Sion is a large auditorium, 2 conference rooms, a green screen room, the IT department, the library, 2 printers, many areas for study, board games for student uses, a large deck outside and a small cafe area with a fridge and is also a space for Lego building. The LRC is also where the proud IPC Chess team plays their games with 2 electronic machines dedicated to chess, the LRC is tech free Monday to Thursday. [13]

More information can be found at Learning Resource Centre | Ignatius Park College.[13]

The Hall

The Edmund Rice Hall is fully air conditioned where full College assemblies are held along with multiples of events. It is a large very open area with a stage at the front and 2 very large projectors, projecting onto banners for visible use. It has a full basketball court that can turn into a volleyball court as well. Entrances on all sides allow easy access in and out, as well into the 2 Hall classrooms that overlook the area. [14]

The IPC Hall during a full school assembly

Kitchen facilities, including a cold room, dishwasher and service area. Please note that our kitchen is not licensed for food preparation. As such, all food must be prepared and provided by an external catering company. High-quality audiovisual facilities, including stereo sound and two large rear projection screens (4-metre wide) with projector.[14]

The Hall is available to hire out, for information go to Edmund Rice Hall | Ignatius Park College.[14]

Camp Gedling

Ignatius Park College also is the proud owner camp Gelding, which was purchased in 1980 from the Gelding family. Since then, it has served the College and a range of other community organizations, businesses and individuals as a venue for educational, training and recreational activities.[15]

Camp Gedling is set out of the Townsville region, located at Hervey Range approximately 35km from Townsville on the Hervey Range Development Road, and is placed at a slightly higher altitude, meaning it is often much colder that the rest of the coastal area. Camp Gedling is not a highly developed area, it is a basic camp site. However it does have a kitchen with catering to be arranged by whomever is currently using it. A covered dining area, an activity hall, a land line telephone, electricity, hot water and septic toilets. [15]

Camp Gedling's High Ropes Course.

The water availability on the property is directly dependent on seasonal rainfall, as such the regulated use of bore water and dam water are used for irrigation and washing, not suitable for drinking. The water collected by rainfall is strictly rationed and conserved as too not run out of water whilst people are occupying the space. [15]

Camp Gedling is available for hire for more information go to Camp Gedling | Ignatius Park College.[15]

Additional facilities: A high ropes obstacle course, many open areas for general activities, Keelbottom Creek is nearby for easy access to water-based activities subject to seasonal flow in the creek, abseiling sites to be accessed with owner's permission, with many additional land-based activities see Camp Gedling | Ignatius Park College.[15]

Science Labs

The New Science Labs
The Old Science labs

Completed May of 2025 the old Ignatius Park College science labs were demolished and rebuilt. After this rebuilding the science labs became the most developed and state of the art science labs in all of North Queensland. Every lab is equipped with id sensors, projector screens, cameras for live demonstration, cabinets with basic equipment for practical lessons, lab safety equipment, bag storage and many storage facilities and connection to rooms filled with science equipment not safe to have in a normal classroom.[16]

These rooms also redid the pavement in front of them to be a nicer and slightly wider surface for students to walk across with a high railing and decretive sun cover. The project cost IPC ~3 million Australian dollars to complete and was done in part of the renovation and future strategy of IPC leadership. Whilst the science labs were being rebuilt temporary labs were set up in the old library which after the LRC was constructed and after the science labs were rebuilt as of 16/06/26 is not in use.[17]

Rugby league

Ignatius Park's rugby league program is offered from U/13s through to the First XIII with around 300 students involved in teams.[18]

Australian football Achievements

The college competes in the AFL Queensland Schools Cup, the premier Australian Rules Football competition for schools in Queensland, it is run by AFL Queensland.

Senior male (Years 10-12)

1st place, gold medalist(s) Champions: 2017

Junior male (Years 7-9)

3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Third Place: 2017
1st place, gold medalist(s) Champions: 2017

Basketball team Achievements

Championship Men (Open)

2nd place, silver medalist(s) Runners Up: 2015

Notable alumni

  • Tom Chester – professional rugby league player for the North Queensland Cowboys
  • Jason Clarke – actor, known for his work in Terminator Genisys and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
  • Kyle Feldt – professional rugby league player for St Helens R.F.C.
  • Aidan Guerra – professional rugby league player for the Sydney Roosters
  • Coen Hess – professional rugby league player for the North Queensland Cowboys and the Queensland Maroons
  • Valentine Holmes – professional rugby league player for the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks and the Queensland Maroons[19]
  • Corey Jensen – professional rugby league player for the Brisbane Broncos
  • Patrick Kaufusi – professional rugby league player for the North Queensland Cowboys
  • Joe Kelly – politician; Member for Greenslopes (Labor), Deputy Speaker of the Legislative Assembly
  • Anthony Mitchell – professional rugby league player for the North Queensland Cowboys
  • Michael Morgan – professional rugby league player for the North Queensland Cowboys and the Queensland Maroons
  • Kayln Ponga – professional rugby league player for the Newcastle Knights and the Queensland Maroons
  • Scott Prince – professional rugby league player for the Gold Coast Titans

See also

References

  1. "Ignatius Park College". Education AUST. Archived from the original on 25 October 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  2. "IPC History". Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 25 October 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  3. "Baillie | Ignatius Park College". Baillie | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  4. "Carew | Ignatius Park College". Carew | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  5. "Nolan | Ignatius Park College". Nolan | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  6. "Michael Putney (bishop)", Wikipedia, 9 April 2026, retrieved 9 June 2026
  7. "Putney | Ignatius Park College". Putney | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  8. "Reid | Ignatius Park College". Reid | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 10 June 2026.
  9. "Rice | Ignatius Park College". Rice | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 10 June 2026.
  10. "Treacy | Ignatius Park College". Treacy | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 16 September 2025. Retrieved 10 June 2026.
  11. "Catholic School Townsville | Catholic Education | Ignatius Park College | Ignatius Park College". Catholic School Townsville | Catholic Education | Ignatius Park College | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 4 February 2026. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  12. "Pool | Ignatius Park College". Pool | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 14 August 2025. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  13. "Learning Resource Centre | Ignatius Park College". Learning Resource Centre | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 14 August 2025. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  14. "Edmund Rice Hall | Ignatius Park College". Edmund Rice Hall | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 14 August 2025. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  15. "Camp Gedling | Ignatius Park College". Camp Gedling | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 14 August 2025. Retrieved 9 June 2026.
  16. Schoolzine. "Ignatius Park College eNewsletter". Ignatius Park College eNewsletter. Retrieved 16 June 2026.
  17. Schoolzine. "Ignatius Park College eNewsletter". Ignatius Park College eNewsletter. Retrieved 16 June 2026.
  18. "Sports | Ignatius Park College". Sports | Ignatius Park College. Archived from the original on 14 August 2025. Retrieved 11 June 2026.
  19. "Mini Maroons to join Origin stars on field where dreams are made". ABC News. 8 June 2021. Retrieved 12 June 2026.