Clarendon_College_(Jamaica)

Clarendon College (Jamaica)

Clarendon College (Jamaica)

Public school in Chapelton, Clarendon, Jamaica


Clarendon College, commonly called CC, is a high school in the town of Chapelton in northern Clarendon, Jamaica.

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History

It is the oldest school in the parish and was founded on 2 February 1942 by the Rev'd. Lester Davy, Minister of Religion of the Congregational Church Union of Jamaica.[1]

Lester Robert Davy was born in 1909, son of Ruth-Ann Eliza Davy (nee Phillips) and David S. Davy, of Davyton, Manchester. He originally trained as a teacher at The Mico University College in Kingston, Jamaica. Rev'd. T. Hughes of the Congregational Union of Jamaica convinced Davy to build a school and that he did accomplish at Rose Bank in Chapelton Clarendon.

The school started with only two teachers,[2] Rev. Davy and Mrs. Hyacinth Balford, and ten students, including Davy's nephew, Horace V. Freeman (later, CD, an attorney-at-law). The school was later relocated to its current location on Chapelton Hill. Following Davy'ss tragic death in a train accident at the end of February 1942, the school was administered by Rev'd. and Mrs. T. A. M. Grant. An annual march is held on February 2 to highlight and commemorate the legacy of Rev. Lester Davy.

The current principal of Clarendon College is David Wilson, and its motto reads: "Perstare et Praestare", which means "persevere and excel".

In 2023, the school football team beat Trinidad & Tobago to win the fourth KFC International School Football tournament.[3]

Notable alumni

  • Bertram Fraser-Reid[5]
  • Minna Israel (former President of RBC Royal Bank Jamaica)[6][7]
  • Andre Russell, West Indies cricketer
  • Debbie Bisoon, TV Host (Television Jamaica)
  • Chinagozi Ugwu-Jibril, epidemiologist who has dedicated her life to improving lives of infants, attended Clarendon College.

See also


References

  1. Barrett, Lindsay (6 February 2012). "Black History Month: Dudley Thompson, When Jamaica meets Africa". The Africa Report. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  2. Fraser-Reid, Bert (2012). "Growing Up In Jamaica". From Sugar to Splenda: A Personal and Scientific Journey of a Carbohydrate Chemist and Expert Witness. Springer. pp. 15–30. ISBN 978-3-642-22781-3. Retrieved 5 February 2024.

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