Tipperary, Ireland

Brother Patrick Ambrose Treacy

 1834-1868 – Beginning

Br Ambrose Treacy

Br Ambrose Treacy

Patrick Ambrose Treacy was born 31 August 1834 in Thurles, Tipperary, Ireland. On Friday 13 February 1852 he left home for the Novitiate in Waterford. He taught in Waterford for three years before going to Wexford where he spent eight years, becoming an accomplished teacher. He took charge of the Brothers’ school in Carlow in 1863, showing good leadership qualities. In July 1868 the Superior General appointed him as leader of the Australian mission to Melbourne. He and three other Brothers left Ireland on 15 August 1868 and arrived in Melbourne on 18 November 1868.

CLUNES, VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA - 17 AUGUST 2012: Historical buildings and an old miners cottage in the 1860's goldrush town of Clunes, near Ballarat, in the heart of the Victorian goldfields region.  N .jpg

1868-1870 - In a new land


The Brothers began teaching in St Francis’ school as well as collecting throughout Melbourne after school hours. The bishop told Ambrose, “I don’t have a rap,” when Ambrose expected financial help. “Throw yourself on the people,” he told him. Ambrose accepted the challenge. He sent Br Barnabas Lynch to Bendigo to collect in the country and he himself began collecting in journeys that are the stuff of legend. Enough money was in hand to lay the foundation stone of the new school at Victoria Parade on 21 November 1870, the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lady in the Temple.

Ballarat, Australia

 
 
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The 1870s – A busy decade and the beginning of trouble


The Parade was ready for school in 1871, less than three years after the Brothers arrived in Melbourne and the debt cleared the following year. Ambrose believed that accepting a small fee from those who could pay for their schooling would conserve a lot of energy. He asked the General Chapter of 1871 to allow this. They agreed on the proviso that those who could not pay would not be excluded.

In 1874 under pressure from Bishop Goold, he took over the responsibility for St Vincent’s Orphanage in South Melbourne. When offered a school in Queensland he sent Br Joseph Barrett to look at the possibilities. A few months later, in 1875, Gregory Terrace opened.

The pace was quickening. The Brothers began work in the Jesuit parish of Richmond and for a while all went well. Ambrose moved the novitiate to this site. Schools were opened in Dunedin, New Zealand, and in Skipton Street, Ballarat. In 1878 St Kilda began. St Augustine’s Orphanage in Geelong was taken over at the insistence of the Bishop, and Wakefeld Street in Adelaide, which would soon take in boarders, was opened.

Problems multiplied. Several Brothers from Ireland were too ill and many died within a few years of arrival. There was unrest among the Brothers, some of whom were very critical of Ambrose’s leadership and others who were unwilling to accept the discipline of religious life. Ambrose made a special trip to Ireland to obtain more Brothers, with only limited success. He attended the General Chapter of 1880, explaining the difficulties and opportunities of the Australian mission.

St Joseph’s Cathedral, Dunedin, New Zealand

 

The 1880s – Backs to the Wall


While the General Chapter was sympathetic to Australia’s needs, it decreed that there would be no new openings there for ten years. So this decade was one of holding on. Ambrose administered the schools, organised the finances, filled in when Brothers took ill, and handled problems that arose with bishops and Brothers. The strain was showing. Brothers spoke of how stooped the Provincial had become.

A major problem was a misunderstanding with the Jesuits in Richmond. Eventually Ambrose withdrew the Brothers from this mission. Another problem awaited him. The new Archbishop of Melbourne, Dr Thomas Carr, wanted to confine the Brothers to primary education and to inspect their schools. Ambrose resisted.

Before the decade was finished, Cardinal Moran of Sydney prevailed on the General Council to allow an opening in Balmain. At this time the Assistant, Br Joseph Butler, visited Australia and, impressed with its potential, arranged for an increase in the number of Brothers coming to Australia. The worst was passed.

After Balmain there were openings in Maryborough, Queensland, and in Ballarat, Victoria. Things were on the move again. In 1889 there were two new foundations in Sydney, one at St Thomas’ in Lewisham and one at the nearby suburb of Newtown. Though all these meant increased work for Ambrose, the problems that had weighed him down were largely behind him.

Cardinal Patrick Moran, circa 1900

 
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The 1890s – On the move again


This was a decade of remarkable expansion, each year bringing new foundations. Ambrose opened both the High School at Lewisham and Nudgee College in 1891. The latter is a remarkable testimony to his faith in Providence. He had no Brothers, money was in short supply, but because the need was great he pressed ahead, believing that the Lord would enable it to come about.

1892 saw the beginning of Rozelle in Sydney and Ipswich in Queensland. There were three new schools in 1893: Abbotsford, Melbourne, the boarding school at St Patrick’s, Ballarat, and the primary school at St James’ in Brisbane. 1894 saw openings at opposite ends of the continent: at Rockhampton in Central Queensland and St Malachy’s at the Terrace in Perth. 1895 was comparatively quiet. Only St Patrick’s primary school in Perth was opened.

In 1896 came the development of Province headquarters in Petersham, Sydney, where Ambrose also located the Novitiate. A third orphanage in addition to the two in Victoria was opened in Subiaco, Perth (Ambrose later moved it to Clontarf where there was a better water supply) in 1897. The following year saw the beginning at Albany in Western Australia and undertaking his ffth boarding school, St Patrick’s, Goulburn.

The decade was completed in 1899 with the opening of the school in Toowoomba, Queensland. Secondary education for ordinary people in Australia owes its beginning to Ambrose as does affordable boarding schools.

Waverley College, NSW, Australia

  • The 1900s - Exiled

    At the General Chapter of 1900 Ambrose was elected as First Assistant to the Superior General. He made the Visitation of communities in Australasia and South Africa in 1903-04. The first signs of the cancer that would take his life made its appearance at this time.

    Three Pioneer Christian Brothers in Australia - Dominic Fursey Bodkin, Patrick Ambrose Treacy, John Barnabas Lynch

  • 1910-1912 – Mission accomplished

    Ambrose’s story shows a man on mission. What motivated him? Providence was truly his inheritance, he had a close relationship with Mary, to whom he said he owed his vocation, and he worked unselfishly, expecting no personal reward for his labours. The prayer he said so often came alive within him: Live Jesus in our hearts . . . forever

    The grave of Br Patrick Ambrose Treacy at Nudgee Cemetery, Brisbane

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Celebrating 150 Years

This year marks 200 years of Catholic education in Australia. For 150 of those years, Parade College has been providing quality education to generations of young men—from its original site in East Melbourne to its current home in Bundoora. 

The school held its 2021 Opening Mass and inaugural event of their sesquicentennial year on Friday 29 January. 



College Principal Andy Kuppe, himself a graduate of the College, expressed his delight at marking the occasion: ‘What a blessing that the day selected [for this gathering] is 150 years to the day that the first Bishop (Archbishop James Alipius Goold) opened Parade College with Mass on 29 January 1871.’  

Andy Kuppe is the College’s first lay principal, following 148 years of leadership by the Congregation of Christian Brothers, beginning with Br Ambrose Treacy and concluding with the retirement of Br Denis Moore in 2019.

The Christian Brothers arrived in Melbourne in 1868 at the invitation of Archbishop Goold. They began teaching in a small primary school at the rear of St Francis’ Church on Lonsdale Street.



These days, the Edmund Rice Campus of Parade College in Bundoora is proud to educate more than 1,800 students and a combined staff of almost 300 personnel.  The College also offers Certificates II and III in Building and Construction through its Trade Training Centre, a facility that is open to students from all local schools and has expanded its trade training options comprehensively over the past decade.



As part of the College's 150th-anniversary celebrations, Archbishop Comensoli was presented with a reproduction of the painting Mater Amabilis ("Mother most loving"). This depiction of Mary originally hung in the parlour of the Christian Brothers School monastery in Thurles, County Tipperary, Ireland. 

The outdoor sculpture (pictured above) of Br Ambrose and his companions commemorates their arrival in Melbourne 150 years ago the 50th anniversary of Parade College East Melbourne relocation to its present site at Bundoora.

 

Resources

 
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Learn more about our history

The Oceania Province assists people wishing to source material about the Christian Brothers and more specifically about the Brothers in the Oceania Region.