St Eunan's College


St Eunan's College, known locally as The College to distinguish it from the cathedral and GAA club, is a voluntary Roman Catholic all-male secondary day school in County Donegal, Ireland. It is located on Sentry Hill in the Glencar district of Letterkenny. Named after Adomnán or Eunan, the school's foundation stone was laid on the patron saint's feast day of 23 September.
Its [|buildings and grounds] include the College Chapel, a medial courtyard and playing fields. Architectural features include four turreted round towers and flying buttresses which are modelled on the nearby Cathedral. Sporadic extensions have occurred, including during the early 1930s and the late 1970s — science laboratories and a demonstration room were added in between these two periods of major building work. A monkey puzzle tree grows on the front lawn close to the front door and the College Chapel. Those men who have attended the College are termed Old Adomnánians.
Sportsmen educated there include Olympic athletes, Mark English and Philip Deignan, as well as several current county footballers, among whom are Michael Murphy, Shaun Patton and Niall O'Donnell. Several members of Cabinet were educated here, including Pa O'Donnell, Neil Blaney and Jim McDaid. Others educated there include quiz player Pat Gibson, actor Ray McAnally and lexicographer Niall Ó Dónaill.
The College has a tradition since its foundation of hosting [|musicals, operas, operettas and other performances]. Its current principal is Damien McCroary; the All-Ireland-winning Gaelic footballer, Colm McFadden, serves as his deputy.

History

Antecedent institutions: 1700s–1800s

Anthony Coyle, the first Bishop of Raphoe to take up residence in Letterkenny, established a classical academy during the eighteenth century. Then, in the following century, Bishop Patrick McGettigan appointed a priest as a teacher of Greek, Latin and mathematics at a building on Castle Street in 1825. The school was abandoned by the mid-1830s due to a priest shortage and a professor having died. A further school followed during the 1830s, close to the current college, though it too was shortlived, as was another school in the town during the 1840s.
In 1849, Bishop McGettigan approved the setting up of a school in the Literary Institute; this would become known as the "Old Seminary" and the "Latin School". This was the final school before the college was established and the longest lasting of its antecedents. Run independently for three decades, in 1879 the Bishop formally placed it under the management of the Catholic Church after the last of various doctors and others men, who had until then run the school, died prematurely. The recently ordained Fr. Edward Maguire, then aged 24, was appointed president. Maguire had, by the 1880s, been sent to Maynooth. Fr. Patrick McCaffery succeeded him as president; he, in his turn, was succeeded by Fr. P. J. Brennan in 1889. Fr. J. J. O'Doherty succeeded Fr. Brennan as President; Fr. O'Doherty then gave way to the last president of the Old Seminary, Fr. Hugh Gallagher.
As scholar numbers began to outgrow the facilities available at the Literary Institute, Bishop of Raphoe Patrick O'Donnell sought to establish a boarding school to provide a classical education. The college was established as a minor seminary to prepare young men for the priesthood of the Catholic Church. Diocesan colleges experienced an increasingly favoured stature at the time and were set up to give a unrivalled Catholic education to boys of every class. The College's motto, In hoc signo vinces, meaning "by this sign - - you shall conquer" is derived from the episcopal motto of O'Donnell.

Foundation, fire and the national grid: 1904–1944

In 1904, the College's foundation stone was laid on the feast of St Eunan. Priests from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Raphoe gathered money from around the world for its erection. The College opened in September 1906, with the Rev. Edward Maguire as its first president. Latin, Greek and history were taught. The Rev. Maguire remained as president of the College until 1910 when he was sent to another parish.
The Rev. Michael Ward succeeded the Rev. Maguire as president; he had been at the College since its opening four years previously and served as president until his sudden death aged 41 in 1919. The Rev Ward's Presidency featured a fire in the College, this after a student died in 1912.
The Rev. Patrick D. McCaul became the third president of the College; he too had taught there since its opening but had been appointed to the cathedral parish in 1918, only to be brought back after the Rev. Ward's death. The Rev. McCaul's tenure, which lasted until he was sent to another parish in 1929, coincided with increased student registrations and made an extension to the College much needed. This was built in the early 1930s during the tenure of the Rev. John Kerr, the only president of the College to succeed to the presidency without having been a member of the teaching staff — until, that is, the arrival of Christopher Darby from Ballyshannon's Coláiste Cholmcille in 2009. Kerr's tenure lasted until 1944, at which time he was sent to another part of the county. The Rev. Kerr's presidency included the College's [|Silver Jubilee] in 1931 and, like the Rev. Ward before him and others later, coincided with the death of a student; in this case he was brought to the district hospital in pain in October 1933, but died on 7 October. The same year, the College was connected to the ESB national grid for the first time. Until that time, it had obtained electricity from a system the Rev. McCaul had near the College's handball alleys.

Chapel, opera, telescope and playing field: 1944–1971

The Rev. Arthur McLoone was the College's fifth president and the first to have studied at the College. A classical scholar, he taught Latin and Greek, served as Dean and as Bursar and involved himself in the College's annual opera; he had a special fondness for the operettas of Gilbert and Sullivan. His ten-year presidency of the College is noted for the development of the first playing field opposite the College and the new College Chapel which was finished in 1952. He was noted for his administrative ability. Sent away to Killybegs in mid-1954, the Rev. McLoone's death came all of a sudden during celebrations for the College's [|Golden Jubilee in 1956].
The Rev. Christopher Finnegan, sixth president of the College, was with its founder Cardinal O'Donnell on his death in 1927. He taught English, had been vice president of the College since 1944 and worked with the Rev. McLoone in the staging of his beloved Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. A gifted preacher and eloquent orator, he oversaw the building of the Recreation Hall in 1958, before dying in office aged 61 in December 1960.
s are among the school's many impressive architectural features.
The Rev. Dr. Daniel J. Cunnea, seventh president of the College, was also educated there. After completing a doctorate and spending some time working at Knockbeg College, he joined the St Eunan's staff in 1942 as a teacher of science and mathematics. With the Rev. Finnegan having just suddenly died, the Rev. Dr. Cunnea was propelled into the presidency in January 1961. Noted for his use of a telescope to study the night sky, he oversaw improvements in the College's science facilities, including two science laboratories and a demonstration room in 1964, before being sent to a remote village in another part of the county in 1969.
The Rev. Peter McMahon, eighth president of the College, had, like his predecessor, been educated there and joined the staff in 1953, holding the posts of Dean and Bursar. The Rev. McMahon was president for two years, bridging the gap between the 1960s and 1970s. Though sent to administer a nearby rural parish, he remained as a member of staff and taught mathematics at the College until 1981.

"Free education" and demise of boarding: 1971–present

The Rev. Austin Laverty, ninth president of the College, had also studied there and, like the Rev. McLoone and the Rev. McMahon, held the posts of Dean and Bursar. Appointed to the presidency in 1971, he steered the College through the difficult years that followed the introduction of "free education" by Donogh O'Malley, who made the decision without consulting his colleagues in cabinet. With a growing population of children to be accommodated, the curriculum overhauled, and classical subjects demoted to suit the needs of the less able, the less academic child introduced to the realities of an advanced secondary education, an extension to the College was required by the mid-1970s. Work got underway in 1977, ended in 1979, and the "New Building" was inaugurated in 1981, the 75th anniversary of the College's foundation. The Rev. Laverty began improvements to the College's boarding facilities but departed in January 1982 to become cathedral parish administrator.
The Rev. Daniel Carr, tenth president of the College, studied there too and joined the staff. During nearly seven years as president, the Rev. Carr continued improvements begun under his predecessor and encouraged the College's first computer network of BBCs. The first computer in the school was an Apple II. Edward Harvey was the teacher who began a computer club at the College in 1980. With the number of boarders declining under the Rev. Carr's Presidency, some dormitories could be turned into classrooms. In 1988, the Rev. Carr was sent to the same remote village in another part of the county as the Rev. Dr. Cunnea, though the Rev. Carr recovered to receive the title of monsignor.
The Rev. Cathal O'Fearrai, eleventh president of the College, had been recalled from Dublin in 1982 by Bishop of Raphoe Séamus Hegarty and posted to the College's teaching staff. Six years later he became President, overseeing the creation of a computer laboratory, an all-weather pitch, and a front playing field. With the development of secondary schools in the county, the number of boarders at the College continued to decline and in 1992 the College's boarding wing was shut. This allowed the president to create a library and more classrooms from the last available boarding facilities, an achievement completed before he was sent away in 1996.
The Rev. Michael Carney, twelfth president of the College, like many of his predecessors studied there. He was the College's organist and assistant director of the College's choir before being appointed to the College's teaching staff in 1989–90, teaching history, music, and religion, until assuming the presidency in 1996. As president, the Rev. Carney accompanied students and teachers of the German language to Vienna, Austria in 1999. Links with other continental schools were also developed, including a school in Perros-Guirec, Brittany in northwestern France. The annual ski trip began in 1997. Other events during the Rev. Carney's presidency included the separate deaths of, first, a student and, later, a member of the teaching staff — Antoin Ó Colla of Cloughaneely, who had taught Irish, history, and geography at the College since 1974. In addition, the College celebrated its [|centenary year in 2006]. The Rev. Carney served as president of the College until 2009, taking up residency as priest at Ramelton where he was in situ when local scientist William Cecil Campbell won the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
In 2009, Christopher Darby, until that time vice-principal of Coláiste Cholmcille in Ballyshannon, became the first lay president of the College, taking over from the Rev. Carney. He retired in 2019.
Damien McCroary, a teacher of religion and history from Castlefin who joined the staff under the Rev. Carney in 2002 and who had been Darby's deputy since 2017, succeeded him. The All-Ireland-winning Gaelic footballer, Colm McFadden, was promptly appointed his deputy. As with several of his predecessors, McCroary had to deal with the death of a student.

Silver Jubilee

The College's silver jubilee occurred in 1931 during the Rev. Kerr's presidency. The foundation stone for the College's "New Wing" was laid on 23 September that year as part of the events held to mark the occasion. High Mass was held in the nearby cathedral, over which the Rev. Kerr presided. In his sermon he noted that past students of the College had gone on to become priests or to work in civil or military professions.
A banquet was held that evening, at which a toast was proposed to the Bishop of Raphoe, William MacNeely and the hope expressed that he would be alive to witness the [|Golden Jubilee].
The occasion also prompted the establishment of the past students' union. Its meeting and dinner would occur annually for many decades. It vanished during the 1960s.

Golden Jubilee

The College's golden jubilee occurred in 1956 during the Rev. Finnegan's presidency. In April that year, Canon Patrick Kerr, College President throughout the 1930s and the first half of the 1940s, and who had since risen to the rank of Archdeacon of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Raphoe, died. Events held on Wednesday, 26 September, marked the jubilee. According to the Derry People, "close on three hundred past students...came from all parts of the country, and some from overseas, to do honour to their Alma Mater". One member of the original staff, Denis J. Murray, was still alive and present on the day. As with the earlier jubilee, High Mass was held in the nearby cathedral, this time presided over by former member of staff, Fr. John McMackin.
A banquet was held that evening in the study hall. According to The Irish Press, a telegram to Bishop MacNeely from the Pope, and which recognised the occasion, was read aloud to those in attendance. Among the other guests were Bishop of Derry Neil Farren and two former students — the then Leas-Cheann Comhairle Cormac Breslin and Minister for Local Government Pa O'Donnell. Also present was the Rev. Finnegan's predecessor as president, the Rev. McLoone, who returned to Letterkenny on Tuesday 25 September 1956. After toasts to figures such as the Pope and bishop were offered, the Rev. McLoone proposed a toast to Éire. He spoke in the Irish language for several minutes, then he died. He was promptly returned to Killybegs that same evening and interred that Friday following a requiem mass which was overseen by Bishop MacNeely and each priest of that diocese. A photograph of the golden jubilee group taken at the College's front door features the Rev. McLoone on the day of his death.

Centenary

The College's centenary occurred in 2006 during the Rev. Carney's presidency. A weekend of events marked the occasion, beginning on Friday, 6 October, with an exhibition and the launch of the centenary booklet. Bishop of Derry Séamus Hegarty — a former student and, later, patron — opened the exhibition. On display were books, uniforms and other memorabilia. The exhibition included photographs of past and present staff and students, as well as the College's sports teams. No Presidential deaths are recorded during the event.
On the Saturday a sporting exhibition took place on the playing fields, including a veterans' football match, as well as a veterans' game of association football.
The traditional Mass in the nearby cathedral on these occasions was overseen by Bishop of Raphoe Philip Boyce on the Sunday. The Mount Errigal Hotel hosted a dinner dance that evening.
Head Boy for the centenary year was James McNicholl. Others present amongst the student body during the centenary year included : Seniors: Mark McGowan, Ross Wherity, John Logue, Adrian Harmon, Michael Murphy, Antoin McFadden, Sean McVeigh and Eamonn Doherty ; Juniors: Cillian Morrison, Mark English, Caolan Ward, and Conor Parke.
Other events took place throughout the academic year. These culminated in the College Centenary Golf Classic at Letterkenny Golf Club on Sunday 8 April 2007. The professional golfer Paul McGinley — recently seen further south at the Ryder Cup, and whose father Mick studied at the College and was part of the 1956 MacRory Cup-winning team — launched the College Centenary Golf Classic. McGinley provided two prizes for the event: a set of TaylorMade golf clubs and one of his 2006 Ryder Cup sweaters.

Governance

The College was founded on a Roman Catholic basis, under the trusteeship of the Bishop of Raphoe. It serves approximately 900 students — from Letterkenny and its surrounding area — and is one of the few remaining all-male schools in northwestern Ireland.
From its foundation until 2004, a single manager oversaw the College. Government regulation of education obliged the College to comply with the terms of the 1998 Education Act and the Education and Welfare Act, 2000. In 2004 the College's management structure was altered and a board of management established in place of the single manager.
The College continues to be under the trusteeship of the Bishop of Raphoe.
Women have been among the staff since 1929. Between 1929 and 1991, first requested by the Rev. McCaul during his presidency, two Sisters of Mercy were appointed to the staff of the College. One of the women served as matron and tended to the health of the College's students. The other woman was director of domestic affairs in the College kitchens. The college employed a female secretary in 1981.

List of presidents

There have been 14 Presidents of the College since its foundation. All but two were members of the teaching staff before being appointed to the College presidency; the exceptions being the Rev. Patrick Kerr and Mr. Christopher Darby. Two Presidents have died in office; these are denoted with a. Six Presidents had themselves been educated at the College; these are marked with
The College was designed by Irish architect Thomas Francis McNamara, attached to the firm of W. H. Burne and Co. The Belfast firm, Messrs Laverty and Co., were contracted to carry out the job. The cost of the building was approximately £22,000.
A three-storey edifice resembling a medieval keep, it has been called "the castle on the hill". Architectural features include four turreted round towers and flying buttresses which are modelled on the nearby cathedral. There is a medial courtyard and a stone chapel. A habitat on the grounds comprises flora, fauna, and fungi, including a monkey puzzle tree on the front lawn.
The foundation stone for the "New Wing" was laid on 23 September 1931 as part of the silver jubilee. It opened in September 1933, when it was used initially as accommodation for those priests who had, until that time, lived at addresses on the adjacent College Row, close by the school gates.
The College Chapel was finished in 1952 during the presidency of the Rev. McLoone. The chapel was designed by J. J. Robinson, architect of Galway Cathedral, and completed in 1961 at a cost of £42,000. The outline of a subterranean toilet block parallel to the College Chapel, which was used until the mid-1930s, can still be seen today. On Saturday 21 October 2017, the class of 1962–67 held a reunion at the College, which began with a service in the College Chapel to remember the eight who were absent due to death.
Two science laboratories and a demonstration room were added in 1964 during the presidency of the Rev. Dr. Daniel J. Cunnea, who was schooled in, and took an interest in, science and mathematics. Work got underway on a further extension to the College in 1977 during the presidency of the Rev. Laverty. Work concluded in 1979, and the "New Building" was inaugurated in 1981 — the 75th anniversary of the College's foundation. The Rev. O'Fearrai created the College Library by converting the remnants of the boarding facilities after this wing closed in 1992. Early 21st-century efforts to attempt a further extension proved fruitless. Two plans were drawn up, but an approach was never finished. As per planning regulations, the school installed a set of ramps and two chair-lifts. To serve first-year students, three prefabs were installed in summer 2008; these were followed by four ancillary prefabs in summer 2010.
The first playing field opposite the College was completed during the presidency of the Rev. McLoone. On 3 May 2019, the Minister with Responsibility for Defence Paul Kehoe and Chief of Staff of the Defence Forces Vice Admiral Mark Mellett reviewed 114th Infantry Battalion on the playing fields at the College in advance of its UNIFIL deployment to Southern Lebanon, Ireland's largest overseas mission to date. The College was selected in recognition of County Donegal providing the largest contingent of troops to the mission. The ceremony included a parading of the unit colours, a speech by Kehoe and a ceremonial "march past". Minister for Education Joe McHugh, in whose constituency the event took place, was among other dignitaries in attendance.

College structure

The College comprises two houses. The first consists of the Junior Certificate and the second of Leaving Certificate. Students of first year receive an orientation day on arrival dedicated entirely to them; students from more senior years are later introduced. Students of first year must take religion, Irish, English, mathematics, history, geography, science and physical education. They are granted options that range from modern European languages to music or art.
Each year is divided into form classes, named in honour of an Irish saint. These typically correspond with the year of the form class; for instance, an incoming first year student would find himself in a class beginning with the letter A. The following illustrates each form class in use during the centenary year of 2006-07, and is included here as a reference point to notable students mentioned in the "Centenary" section above. The Saint Eunan is not used, though he would fit the scheme for year one of the leaving certificate.

Academic

Junior and Leaving Certificate students usually undertake pre-test examinations each February or March or April, whilst the final examinations follow in June. The College is one of only 18 schools in the county that offers the LCA programme.
Transition Year is available if desired and has been since 1979. It includes two work experience allotments and a choice between computer or sport GCSEs. Spanish is offered during Transition Year along with French and German. Transition Year modules offered — past and present — include first aid, tennis, cookery the study of drama and performance, electronics and driver awareness and a referee course. 2007 brought the introduction of yoga and juggling.
The College has fielded participants at the Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition, with some success experienced during the 21st century. The College sends teams to contest the All-Ireland Higher Maths national finals, a competition for higher level students of mathematics. The College won a gold medal in 1999 and a silver medal in 2007. The College represented also at the 2007 International Mathematical Olympiad in Hanoi. They are regular competitors in the All-Ireland Final.

Sport

Football

"Football" for much of the College's history has meant Gaelic football, and Gaelic football only. This is due to the Gaelic Athletic Association's Rule 27, a former rule in the GAA's Official Guide which forbade members from playing or attending foreign sports.
The College has several national titles. It has a history of contesting the MacRory Cup, going back to finals in the 1950s and 1960s. Tony McKenna, captain of the College's 1956 MacRory Cup Final opponents St. Macartan's, has stated the 1956 team "Must have been the greatest team ever not to win the MacRory". John Wilson trained the team that reached the final of the 1961 MacRory Cup, though he departed for a teaching post at Gonzaga College midway through the year and a young Michael Cullen replaced him as team trainer. Wilson had previously been credited with overseeing a College victory over St Patrick's. Before Wilson departed, he lived at 2 College Row. With the house vacant, staff members Hugh Duffy and Michael Kerr moved in. In 1969, Kerr took over 1 College Row and became the College's vice-president the same year. Kerr was the country's first lay vice-present. Hugh Duffy served as President of ASTI.
In 1979, a College team managed by Paddy Tunney and featuring repeat Leaving Certificate student Charlie Mulgrew won a MacLarnon Cup against De La Salle by a scoreline of 0–11 to 0–7. They then won an All-Ireland Colleges B Final against St. Fintan's of Sutton, Dublin - a game played in Tullamore and ending in a scoreline of 2–6 to 2–5. This was noteworthy as Donegal's first title at All-Ireland level. The county team would not win its first All-Ireland under-21 title until 1982.
At the turn of the millennium, Paddy Tunney stood aside as manager of the College team after 22 years in charge. He took on the post of "director of football" and his assistant Neil Gordon replaced him. Gordon's first year in charge brought immediate success; the College team winning a MacLarnon Cup. Gordon continues to manage the College's Gaelic football team as of 2018, when he led them to a narrow one point loss after extra-time in an Ulster final replay.
The College won the Ulster Herald Cup in 2004, its first Herald Cup title in 25 years. The College football team reached the 2007 All-Ireland B Colleges Football Final. That campaign went as follows: On 25 March 2007, the College defeated Rathmore by a scoreline of 1–9 to 2–3 at Casement Park in Belfast. This brought the team to the semi-final in which they defeated Rice College of Westport. St Mary's of Edenderry were the College's opponents in the All-Ireland Final at Breffni Park in Cavan on 21 April 2007. A penalty save by St Eunan's goalkeeper John Carr ensured the match went to extra-time but the team lost by a scoreline of 2–12 to 0–14. This encouraged the College to again contest the MacRory Cup ; The team reached the semi-final of the 2008 MacRory Cup, in which St Michael's College of Enniskillen overcame them by a scoreline of 1–17 to 0–7 on 22 February 2008.
Teachers at the College involved in the Gaelic Athletic Association include All-Ireland winning footballer Colm McFadden, Glenswilly and Donegal under-20 county football team manager Gary McDaid, and Mickey Houston. Mickey is a former club manager and was also a selector for the Donegal county football team but quit after a row with the manager. He was enjoying the game when his authority was undermined and substitutions were made without his consultation.
During the twentieth century, three students played senior inter-county football while attending the College; these were Seamus Hoare, Martin Carney and Paul McGettigan. In total, seven students have achieved Ulster All Stars while playing for the College. These are, with their years of attendance included, as follows: Sean McEwen, Hugh Brendan Kerr, Mark McGowan, Michael Murphy, Ciaran Cannon, Shaun Patton and Cormac Callaghan.
Colm McFadden, Neil Gallagher, Rory Kavanagh and Michael Boyle — all of whom played for the College football team — played for the Donegal county football team during its most successful period, each winning a National Football League title in 2007, an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in 2012 and several Ulster Senior Football Championships along the way. Michael Murphy — the future All-Ireland winning Donegal team captain — also captained his school team.
The College were MacRory Cup semi-finalists in 2008 with a team featuring Murphy, and were quarter-finalists in 2015 with a team featuring Conor Morrison and Niall O'Donnell.
The relative lack of success of the College — and hence Donegal, as it is the county's foremost competitor — in the MacRory Cup has been explained by Declan Bonner as follows: "The main reason... is because some of the big schools in the north take in a huge amount of students, and can boast players from up to ten to twelve clubs sometimes. In contrast, St Eunan's only take their players from about seven schools and even at that, they wouldn't be getting all the best players from those areas".

Association football

With Gaelic football the College's dominant sport, the development of association football was deterred by the Gaelic Athletic Association's Rule 27. It could not, therefore, become an "official" extracurricular activity at the College until the early 1970s. An illicit soccer league did, however, operate at the College and students even successfully convinced one of the priests who was a Professor at the College to act as referee — provided that they lift the ball and play the Gaelic way in the event that less lenient members of the teaching clergy should wander by.
Since these early experiments with the game, the College has achieved several titles at national level. The first success at national level was the defeat of Saint Joseph's, Fairview, by 1–0 in the final of the 1978 FAIS Junior Cup held at Tolka Park. 1979 brought the College's first senior title at national level, with the team defeating Dublin's Beneavin College by 2–0 in the final of the FAIS Senior Cup held at Terryland Park.
The College won national senior titles in consecutive years in the mid-1980s. The 1985 team — led by Michael Houston — defeated Beneavin by 3–0, while a penalty shoot-out at Belfield Park decided 1986 in the College's favour.
Consecutive national senior titles also came in the mid-2000s. The 2004 team defeated De La Salle College Waterford, by 3–0 in the final at Belfield, while the 2005 team comprehensively defeated a Tallaght outfit by 4–1, also at Belfield Park. The 2004 senior victory was accompanied by under-16 and under-14 titles, the former defeating Summerhill College of Sligo by 1–0 after extra time, while Ollie Horgan managed the latter side to victory in Mullingar. Horgan went on to become manager of the Republic of Ireland schoolboys team and also of Finn Harps, leading the latter team to the League of Ireland Premier Division.
Former Finn Harps player and manager Charlie McGeever was also a member of the teaching staff.

Golf

The College has a competitive history in golf. Michael Cullen oversaw the College's participation in the Aer Lingus Golf Championship during the 1970s. Peter Hickey became the professional at Cork Golf Club.
During the 1980s, the College played in the Ulster Matchplay Championships and the Derryveagh Crystal Golf Championship.
The College won the Donegal Schools' Championship at senior and junior levels in 1993. The senior team won again in 1994.
Four more senior Championship and League titles followed during the 1990s, as well as two in 2000 and 2001. Conrad Logan, who would go on to become a professional footballer in the English Football League, featured in those last two at the turn of the millennium; indeed, Logan's chip and putt sealed the 2001 win. Stephen Sweeney, who went on to become a club professional from Royal County Down Golf Club, played alongside Logan in 2001.
Led by team captain Michael Cullen, the College entered and won the 1995 Donegal Teachers' Championship, with a team also consisting of Jimmy Ward, Edward Harvey, Pat Hickey, Paraic O'Dowd and Tommy Nangle, the winner of the individual award.

Other

— described by Jerry Kiernan as Ireland's "greatest talent" in middle-distance running — was a student at the College. English only made the switch to athletics during his Transition Year, a testament to the success of that experiment which was first made available to students in 1979.
The College is competitive in swimming.
Hurling, a sport at which Donegal teams are not traditionally dominant, has had teams from the College progress to the semi-finals.
The College has a rugby union team, re-established in the 2007-08 academic year after many years of absence. It started playing competitive rugby against other schools in the county and developed under-14, under-16 and ultimately under-18 squads. All age categories compete in their respective Donegal Schools Cup competitions against other schools: Abbey VS, Carndonagh CS, Coláiste Ailigh, Coláiste Cholmcille, Loreto, Mulroy College, Rosses CS, St Columb's College and Saint Columba's College. The College won the first rugby silverware in its history in January 2014, by defeating Saint Columba's College Stranorlar to win the Senior Donegal Schools Cup.
The College won a national basketball title in 2020.

Musicals, operas, operettas and other performances

The College has a rich operatic tradition dating back to its foundation. The first performance held there was of Finnola or The Borrowed Bride, a piece penned by a Loreto sister especially for the Aonach of 1906. Operas and operettas were staged in the Recreational Hall after its completion. They previously took place on an enlarged stage in the Study Hall, with the public admitted — thus allowing for expenses on costumes and performing rights to be covered. Sometimes "girls" were borrowed from the nearby Loreto Convent to participate. Gradually, the British and American "pop music" reached Ireland and interest in the more traditional performances lessened among the students. Efforts were made during the 1980s and 1990s to revive these performances, albeit with the newer musical theatre in place of the opera/operettas of old — the College even sanctioned a production dating from as recently as the early 1970s. It was to no avail. These efforts at revival did nothing for the more sceptical among the student populace. Nowadays, the remnants of the old tradition are best seen in a "rock concert" — held each May since 2000 in the local An Grianán Theatre.
A partial record of College performances of the operettas and Gilbert and Sullivan operas is extant.
An early performance
DatePerformance
July 1906Finnola or The Borrowed Bride

Gilbert and Sullivan years
DatePerformance
1929The Pirates of Penzance
March 17th 1930H.M.S. Pinafore
1931The Mikado
1932-34Unknown
1935Iolanthe
1936–38Unknown
February 1939The Gondoliers
February 1940The Pirates of Penzance
February 1941Princess Ida
February 1942Patience
February 1943The Yeomen of the Guard
1944Unknown
December 1945H.M.S. Pinafore
December 1946The Pirates of Penzance
December 1947The Gondoliers
December 1948Ruddigore
1949-51Unknown
February 1952Iolanthe
February 1953The Mikado
1954-58No productions

Operettas
DatePerformance
December 1959Lilac Time
December 1960The Maid of the Mountains

Return to Gilbert and Sullivan
DatePerformance
December 1961The Mikado
December 1962The Pirates of Penzance
December 1963Ruddigore
December 1964Iolanthe
December 1965The Yeomen of the Guard
December 1966H.M.S. Pinafore
December 1967The Mikado
November/December 1968The Gondoliers
December 1969The Pirates of Penzance
December 1970Iolanthe
1971–76No productions

Operettas
DatePerformance
1977Blossom Time
1979The Student Prince

Musicals
DateShow
1980Oklahoma!
1990Oliver!
1991The King and I
1992West Side Story
1998Grease

Computer Club

Participants in the "Computer Club" of the 1980s included Neil Gordon and Kevin Gillespie. Gordon's inaugural presentation was called "Fuel Consumption", an early indication of where his future interests would lie. The "Computer Club" soon vanished though, as its main activities were absorbed into the curriculum.

Overseas expeditions

Each year since the late twentieth-century, teachers and students alike head for a ski resort during the holidays. The first trip, to Andorra, was organised in 1997. The 2008 trip, when Neil Gordon led a troupe of skiers to the United States, proved eventful — the Airbus craft bringing them home experienced motor difficulties in mid-flight and had to return to Logan International Airport after several hours in the air. The aborted flight received coverage in national media, such as The Irish Times.
The College has taken part in several foreign exchange programmes involving schools in Brittany and Vienna. Many European students have also availed of the education offered by the College — coming from as far as Spain, France and Austria.

Notable staff

Broadcast media
Business
Clergy and vocations
Literature
Performance
Politics
Sports

Footnotes