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The
Story

On
October 6,1996, Pope John Paul II beatified - declared 'Blessed'
- Edmund Rice, the founder of the Christian Brothers and the Presentation
Brothers.
Edmund
Rice was born to a farming family, under the shadow of the Penal
laws, on June 1, 1762, at Westcourt, Callan,
County Kilkenny, Ireland. He attended the commercial academy in
Kilkenny for about two years after secretly receiving his elementary
education at the local 'hedge school' in Callan.
In
1779 Edmund was apprenticed to his uncle, Michael Rice, in the business
of supplying all the needs of ships that plied their trade across
the Atlantic between Europe and the eastern coast of North America.
By his late twenties, through his entrepreneurial skills, he had
earned enough money to make himself and his family comfortable for
life.
Edmund
married Mary Elliot, the daughter to a prosperous Waterford businessman,
in 1786. After three short years of marriage, Mary suffered a tragic
accident, gave birth to a handicapped daughter, also called Mary,
and died shortly after. Edmund was devastated. After a period of
reflection he turned to his special vocation, which was to provide
dignity for the poor, especially through education.
So,
as a 40-year old widower and a successful businessman in Waterford
on Ireland's
southeast coast, Edmund Rice changed course radically. He sold off
his business interests and started a primary school for a few poor
boys in a converted stable, with a room for himself above the makeshift
classrooms.
During
the following year, he used more of his funds to put up a larger
building in the city's working-class district. In 1802 Edmund was
joined by two companions, Thomas Grosvener and Patrick Finn, and
the three began to live a form of community life in rooms over the
Stable School in New Street. The men shared his vision where
they combined a semi-monastic life with the hard work of teaching
unruly boys under primitive conditions.
All
of Edmund's educational activities were illegal in the eyes of the
'authorities' in Ireland. Most Irish Catholics were effectively
cut off from education and consequently cut off from social
and political progress. By founding schools and teaching congregations,
Edmund Rice, like Daniel O' Connell, was a liberator. That is one
reason why O'Connell greatly admired the man he called "patriarch
of the monks of the West.". Appropriately, therefore, Edmund's
first Dublin Schools in North Richmond
Street were named the O'Connell Schools.
But
all these achievements came at a great personal and mental distress.
So, in 1838, Edmund laid down the onerous office of Superior General
and retired to Mount Sion, Waterford.
Edmund
died on the 29th August, 1844. His vision continues to live on in
the positive response to today's challenges made by his successors
in the Edmund Rice Family.
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