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There are eleven residential colleges of the University of Queensland.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2024) |
Cromwell College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27°29′51.21″S 153°00′29.59″E | |||||||||
Full name | Cromwell College | |||||||||
Motto | Ubi spiritus, ibi libertas (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | Where the spirit is, there is liberty | |||||||||
Established | 1954 | |||||||||
Named for | Oliver Cromwell | |||||||||
Gender | Co-educational since 1973, formerly male only | |||||||||
Principal | Simon Armstrong | |||||||||
President | Andrew Gregg (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | 248 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
Duchesne College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27.5017°S 153.0162°E | |||||||||
Full name | Duchesne College | |||||||||
Motto | Robur in luce veritatis (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | Strength in the light of truth | |||||||||
Established | 1937 | |||||||||
Named for | Rose Philippine Duchesne | |||||||||
Gender | Female only | |||||||||
Principal | Michelle Allan | |||||||||
President | Lucinda Poteri (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | 212 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
Emmanuel College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | St Lucia Campus 27.4977°S 153.0082°E | |||||||||
Full name | Emmanuel College | |||||||||
Motto | Fiat Lux (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | Let there be light | |||||||||
Established | 1911 | |||||||||
Gender | Co-educational since 1975, formerly male only | |||||||||
Principal | Stephen Peake | |||||||||
President | Richard Huelin (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | 361 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
Grace College | ||
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University of Queensland | ||
Location | 27.49746°S 153.00708°E | |
Motto in English | My Grace is Sufficient (2 Cor. 12:9) | |
Established | 1970 | |
Gender | Gender inclusive | |
Principal | Peter Walker | |
President | Caitlyn Avery (2024) | |
Residents | 125 | |
Website | www.grace.uq.edu.au |
The Halls of Residence | |||||||||
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University of Queensland | |||||||||
Location | 27.5409°S 152.3261°E College Halls: Pitt, Riddell, Shelton and Thynne | ||||||||
Full name | The Halls of Residence | ||||||||
Motto | Una Adolescamus (Latin) | ||||||||
Motto in English | Together We Grow | ||||||||
Established | 1897 | ||||||||
Named for | Queensland Agricultural College | ||||||||
Gender | Co-educational | ||||||||
Residents | 436 | ||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni |
International House | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27°29′47.67″S 153°00′32.53″E | |||||||||
Full name | International House | |||||||||
Motto | That Brotherhood May Prevail (Latin) | |||||||||
Established | 1965 | |||||||||
Named for | International House organisation | |||||||||
Gender | Co-educational | |||||||||
President | Dr Carla Tromans | |||||||||
Residents | 238 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
King's College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27.5029°S 153.0083°E | |||||||||
Full name | King's College | |||||||||
Motto | Veritas vos liberabit (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | The truth will set you free | |||||||||
Established | 1912 | |||||||||
Named for | King's College, Cambridge | |||||||||
Residents | 317 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni |
Masters
About King's College
King's College provides accommodation for 354 men and women of the University of Queensland and Brisbane based universities. The college operates as an academic residential community of undergraduate and postgraduate members drawn from country and suburban areas throughout Australia as well as many other nations.
King's has a well-equipped gymnasium (including weights room and a cardio room), swimming pool, rowing shed and pontoon, tutorial/study rooms, Old Collegians Learning Centre, barbecue facilities, quarter basketball court and extensive well lit car-parks. The Junior Common Room is equipped with satellite television, billiard table and table tennis table.
King's College is well renowned for its Sporting and Cultural success. Having won the Old Collegians' Cup in 2018 for the 10th consecutive year has further cemented King's Colleges reputation as the 'sporting' college.
St John's College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27°30′02″S 153°00′51″E | |||||||||
Full name | St John's College | |||||||||
Motto | Esolutus iterum vinctus (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | Freed and Rebound | |||||||||
Established | 1911 | |||||||||
Named for | St John the Evangelist | |||||||||
Gender | Co-educational since 1990, formerly male only | |||||||||
Warden | Ms Rose Alwyn | |||||||||
President | Aiden Wu (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | Approximately 306[4] (285 undergraduates, up to 25 postgrads) | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
St John's College is a co-educational residential college on the St Lucia Campus. St John's is the equal oldest college in affiliation with the university. The college was founded in 1911 – the same year The University of Queensland accepted its first students – and is currently home to approximately 300 students (colloquially known as 'Johnians' or 'Jabbers').
Facilities include the Stanley Law Library, the general library, the Gibson Room for biomedical studies (anatomy and histology, speech therapy and physiotherapy). In the gymnasium, there is a weights room, and sauna, as well as pool and ping-pong tables. All undergraduate students also have access to the Junior Common Room. St John's College has a strong social atmosphere. The oldest book at the college library is a Jeremy Bentham text dating back to 1774.
The college has a strong sporting tradition. In 1996 it became the first College at The University of Queensland to win both the men's and women's Inter-Collegiate competitions in the same year. In 2013 St. John's College won both the male and female overall weighted sporting trophies. Since the inception of the ICC Competition, St John's College has won the Old Collegians Cup and the ICC Cultural Cup more times than any other college. In 2018 St John's became the first college since 2000 to win all five domains: Men's and Women's sporting, Men's and Women's weighted sporting, and the ICC Cultural Cup.
Music and drama are particularly strong at the college. There are seven pianos in the college and there are four specially built music practice rooms. A manual and pedal pipe organ was completed in the college chapel in 1994. In 2018 a Harpsichord was added to the college chapel. The choir performs at College functions and in the intercollegiate choral festival. Students from St John's and Women's Colleges perform an annual production. Choral Scholarships are offered by the college.
The college also has a Jazz Club which plays at the annual Jazz Night hosted by the student club, alongside the John's band Who Is John? and alumni bands such as The Eaglets who played in 2017. There is also speculation of a lesser-known subsidiary band of Who is John?, Kazoo is John.
The 'slab' is a monumental section of the college, of which only a few select students know of the location.
St John's College is also thought to be associated with the initiation of the long-standing tradition whereby males, and choice females, drop their pants whenever the song Eagle Rock is played. The tradition is thought to have originated from a small group of mining engineering students from UQ who resided there.
The College Anglican Chapel hosts musical events throughout the year, with an organ which has been played by organists such as Michael Faulkner.[5] The chapel hosts an original artwork which was commissioned for the St. John's College chapel as a celebration of its jubilee[quantify] at St Lucia, Brisbane, where the university relocated. The piece, Earth Creations, is similar to Regeneratation (1972) held at the University House, Australian National University chapel. The college also hosts 9 prints of the 10 piece series The Journey, also by Leonard French, which are held in University House ANU's dining hall.[6][7]
In 2005, Edale wing was burned down in a fire apparently caused by unattended electrical devices left on by a student over the Easter break.[8]
The college is very multicultural with students from Japan, New Zealand, the Soviet Union and the UK.
Lots of tutorials, mainly taught by current and past Johnians. About $240,000 in scholarships yearly. The highest proportion of international students after IH and Grace, with 16% of the college in 2017 being international.
St Leo's College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | St. Lucia | |||||||||
Full name | St Leo's College | |||||||||
Motto | Dominus Illuminatio Mea (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | The lord is my light | |||||||||
Established | 1917 | |||||||||
Named for | St Leo the Great | |||||||||
Gender | Men only | |||||||||
Sister college | Duchesne College | |||||||||
Rector | Steve Foley | |||||||||
President | Finbar Rasmussen (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | 212 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
St Leo's College is a residential College on the St Lucia Campus of the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
St Leo's was founded by Brisbane's Catholic Archbishop Sir James Duhig in 1917 and is named in honour of St Leo the Great – the first Pope Leo (440 AD to 461 AD).[9]
The book The Memory was compiled, and written by Fr Michael Head SJ, a former homogeneous of the college. It provides an entertaining and in depth history of the college from its inception to the mid-1990s.
The college celebrated its centenary in 2017.[10]
The college operates a catering business.[11]
The college has a sporting tradition covering a wide range of athletic pursuits. Through the Inter College Competition (ICC), College teams participate in thirteen sports including football, cricket, tennis, squash, hockey, basketball and others, while the tennis/basketball court is the scene for inter-block competition and casual challenges.
The college performs well in all sports despite its relatively small size (approximately 210 students compared to about 300 at rival colleges); however, St Leo's is one of only two male-only residential colleges at the university. Traditionally strong sports include rugby, athletics, tennis, cricket and touch football, while basketball, cross country and athletics have enjoyed a resurgence during recent year. St Leo's won the ICC Sports Cup (referred to at St Leo's as "The FG Cup") in 2008 after leading King's College all year. Before 2008, St Leo's last won the Cup in 1986 – behind by a handful of ICC points when starting athletics (the last event in the ICC calendar), Simon Doyle later a world ranked 1500m runner, stormed home in the final leg of the 400m relay for Leo's to clinch the Cup.
Before rugby was introduced to ICC, rugby league was the winter contact sport. In the seven seasons from 1978 to 1983, St Leo's won 54 of 56 games, drew one 2-all and lost one game (to Emmanuel) 2-nil. Unsurprisingly, in 1984 the other colleges voted to change to rugby union. Emmanuel College, the only college ever to beat Leo's at Rugby League, voted (unsuccessfully) with Leo's to retain league, earning the friendship and respect of Leo's through the 80s and 90s.
Since 2001, the St Leo's College Open's Rugby Team has lost only 11 games on the back of an unbroken winning streak which stretched from 1992 till the 2001 Grand Final (the longest unbroken winning streak by any team in Queensland). Following this defeat, St Leo's would reclaim the Cup in 2002, and go on to win the Cup again in 2004, 2005 and 2006. Rugby is considered to be primary sport at St Leo's, as surmised in 2001 by Andrew "Chook" Hanrahan, the St Leo's College Sports Convenor for that year, who was quoted as saying "Leos is Rugby".
Despite this emphasis on rugby, St Leo's does excel in other sporting fields. The college performs well in a multitude of sports despite its relatively small size (approximately 175 students compared to about 300 at rival colleges); however, St Leo's and King's College are the only two male-only residential colleges at the university. Despite St Leo's not winning the coveted ICC Sports Cup since 1982 (another record), it continues to be one of the top-tier Colleges for sport in Queensland. In 2007, St Leo's came within 2 points of winning the ICC Cup and in July 2008, the college won the 2008 ICC Sports Cup on the back of a historic win in the 2008 Rugby Final against Kings the Francis & Kassulke Cup.
A gymnasium is available for residents and the college's on-campus location provides easy access to all of the university's sporting facilities.
Students at St. Leos college participate in a wide variety of social activities, within the University of Queensland. The student club run many parties on campus, including Tropicana, St Patrick's Day Boat Cruise, Back to School, ICC Regatta After Party and Mexicana.
Residents are active in a full range of cultural activities, including debates, public speaking, and music.
The Student Club conducts the Annual Duhig Lecture[12] in the second semester of the university calendar. Notable speakers of have included John Howard,[12] Prime Minister of Australia, Peter Beattie, Premier of Queensland, Malcolm Fraser,[12] former Prime Minister of Australia, Peter Garrett,[12] politician and former musician, Chris Masters journalist and Alan Jones[13] (radio broadcaster and one-time Wallabies coach).
Union College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27°29′47.5″S 153°00′26.3″E | |||||||||
Full name | Union College | |||||||||
Motto | Nemo me impune lacessit (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | No one wounds me with impunity | |||||||||
Established | 1964 | |||||||||
Named for | UQ Union | |||||||||
Gender | Co-educational | |||||||||
Head | Fiona Hawthorne | |||||||||
President | Jared Rice (2024 - present) | |||||||||
Residents | 334[20] | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
The Women's College | ||||||||||
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University of Queensland | ||||||||||
Location | 27.5013°S 153.0173°E | |||||||||
Full name | The Women's College | |||||||||
Motto | Capimus ut dividamus (Latin) | |||||||||
Motto in English | We take so that we may share | |||||||||
Established | 1914 | |||||||||
Named for | See 'Admission' | |||||||||
Gender | Female only | |||||||||
Head of College and Chief Executive | Florence Kearney | |||||||||
President | Zimena Furey (2024) | |||||||||
Residents | 255 | |||||||||
Website | Homepage Alumni Homepage |
The Women's College was founded in 1913 and it admitted 19 women residents on 16 March 1914. Anna Frederica Bage was the first principal.[22] This was the first University of Queensland college to admit women. There are currently [when?] 250 undergraduates and postgraduate women residents within the college. Notable alumnae include Harriet Elizabeth Marks,[23] Penelope Wensley, Anna Bligh, and Sallyanne Atkinson.[24]
Facilities include a library, two music rooms, a theatre, the Harriet Marks dining hall, nine common rooms, Chiselhurst seminar room, senior common room, the Freda Bage common room, Maureen Aitken garden and grounds and tennis courts.
The Women's College won the ICC Female sports in both 2015 and 2016 and the ICC Cultural Cup in 2015. The Centenary wing, designed by Architectus, was opened in 2015 to celebrate the college's 100th anniversary.
The University of Queensland Intercollege Council is the representative body for the residential colleges of the University of Queensland. Every year colleges compete for the ICC Sporting and Cultural Cups, the former being further divided into male and female divisions. Maarten Dekeyser is the 2024 ICC President.
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