| St. Mary's College | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Address | |
75 Frederick St.  | |
| Coordinates | 10°39′31″N 61°30′36″W / 10.658498°N 61.510025°W | 
| Information | |
| Other name | College of the Immaculate Conception (CIC) | 
| Type | Government assisted secondary school | 
| Motto | Virtus et Scientia (Latin for 'Manliness and Knowledge')  | 
| Religious affiliation(s) | |
| Established | 1 August 1863 | 
| Principal | Rawle Russel | 
| Teaching staff | 76 | 
| Gender | All male | 
| Enrollment | 1,196 | 
| Campus | Urban | 
| Houses | 
  | 
| Student Union/Association | CIC Past Students Union | 
| Colour(s) | Blue White | 
| Nickname | Saints | 
| Rival | Queen's Royal College/Fatima College | 
| Website | stmarys | 
![]() Main building of St. Mary's College.  | |
St. Mary's College (CIC, which stands for College of the Immaculate Conception) is a government-assisted selective Catholic secondary school located in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago.
Past principals
- Source:[1]
 
- Fr. Victor Guilloux 1863–67
 - Fr. Francis Xavier Corbet 1867–74
 - Fr. Casimir Marcot 1874–76
 - Fr. James Brown 1876–92
 - Fr. Achilles Lemire 1892–94
 - Fr. Nichlas Brennan 1894–95
 - Fr. William Carrol 1896–1903
 - Fr. John Gerard Neville 1903–10
 - Fr. Edward Crehan 1910–20
 - Fr. James Lacy 1920–24
 - Fr. John English 1925–36
 - Fr. James Meenan 1936–50
 - Fr. James Brett 1951–59
 - Fr. Pedro Valdez 1959–71
 - Fr. Arthur Lai Fook 1971–78
 - Fr. Anthony de Verteuil 1978–92
 - Fr. Anton Dick 1992–99
 - Fr. Ronald Mendes 1999–2013
 - Nigel Joseph 2013–23
 - Rawle Russel 2023–present
 
Notable alumni
- Ellis Achong, West Indies Test cricketer
 - Emmanuel Amoroso, reproductive physiologist and developmental biologist
 - Sir Ellis Clarke, second and last Governor-General of Trinidad and Tobago and the first President of Trinidad and Tobago.
 - Diego Cisneros, businessman founder of Grupo Cisneros
 - Joshua Da Silva, West Indies Test cricketer
 - Wayne A.I. Frederick, MD, President of Howard University
 - Ken Gordon, businessman
 - Shaka Hislop, football player
 - John La Rose, publisher and cultural activist
 - Michael Mooleedhar, filmmaker
 - Quintin O'Connor, union leader
 - George Padmore (1903–1959), pan-Africanist, author
 - Dr. Joseph Lennox Pawan, MBE, Trinidadian bacteriologist
 - Clifford Roach, West Indies Test cricketer
 - Dr. Harry Schachter, MD, PhD, Canadian biochemist
 - Eugene Chen (1878–1944), Trinidadian-Chinese politician and foreign minister of Republic of China
 - Jillionaire, DJ and music producer
 - Leslie Fitzpatrick, soccer player.
 - Angus Fraser (clergyman and teacher), Catholic priest, educator, and founder of the Via Christi Society
 
References
- ↑ "Our History". Saint Mary's College. Retrieved June 14, 2023.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.

