College
Blog
Stories and reflections from our students and staff, past and present.
I come from Drogheda in Ireland, the youngest of a family of four. I studied chemistry in Dublin and then Edinburgh and lived in Germany and Cambridge doing research. Just before applying to seminary, I was working in Dublin at a university but decided to pursue my vocation with the Diocese of East Anglia, which I came to know well during my time in Cambridge.
Read moreI am from Ezza-Ezekuna in Ishelu LGA of Ebonyi State, Nigeria. I was born and raised in a place called coal camp, and this is where some of the British miners resided in Enugu at the beginning of the 1900s. It is a huge, Catholic populated area and most of our activities happened within the context of the Catholic faith.
Read moreMy hometown is Burnley in Lancashire, but I have been fortunate to live in Manchester, Bristol, Wolverhampton and Birmingham during my career.
Read moreI come from a devout Catholic family. During my teenage years, I slowly drifted away from the Faith. At 18 I had a reversion to the Faith through the Jesus Youth movement and was actively involved since then.
Read moreI used to be a professional classical ballet dancer. I started dancing when I was 8 years old, and it soon became a dream, to jump as high as a Nureyev or a Nijinsky. I went to the Royal Ballet School in London, for my training and then to Uruguay.
Read moreMy name is Owen Dugan and I come from a small town called Gosport on the south coast. I grew up in a Catholic household and was inspired in my faith from a young age by my maternal grandparents who originate from Malta.
Read moreIn early March 2022, my bishop, Paul Swarbrick, raised with me the possibility that I might move to Oscott as Vice Rector. It came completely out of the blue.
Read moreThe following is an edited version of the journal entries of Peter Ross, originally intended for the Saint Margaret Mary Community. Peter’s full journal entries can be read in the Oscotian Magazine.
Read moreIn the summer of 2022, I had the amazing opportunity to visit India for a pastoral placement, with the support of the College and my own diocese of East Anglia. The bulk of my time was spent in the Don Bosco Boarding Home and St Mary’s and Christopher’s School in Pedavgi near Eluru, in Andhra Pradesh.
Read moreIn 2022, the Sisters of Charity of St Paul the Apostle celebrated the 175th anniversary of their foundation in England.
Read moreThis story began in the village of Knock, in County Mayo, in the West of Ireland on Thursday evening, 21st August 1879.
Read moreThe following are the words of architect Anthony Delarue in response to interview questions. The full article is available in the Oscotian Magazine.
Read moreIn Virginia Woolf’s ‘Mrs Dalloway’, the eponymous heroine is waiting to cross a street in Westminster when, ‘[she] feels…a particular hush, or solemnity; an indescribable pause; a suspense before Big Ben strikes. There! Out it boomed. The leaden circles dissolved in the air.’ The novel, set immediately after the First World War, records the wonder of hearing the bell after it had been silenced for two years (1916-1918).
Read moreOn 8th December 2020, Pope Francis issued his Apostolic Letter ‘Patris Corde’, marking the opening of the ‘Year of Saint Joseph’.2020 seems like an age ago now, especially when we consider the events that have elapsed since! Indeed, the whole world is changing rapidly. It can sometimes seem like we are being tossed from crisis to crisis. The phrase, ‘out of the frying pan into the fire’ comes to mind.
Read moreThe English word ‘vocation’ comes from the Latin word ‘vocāre’, which means ‘to call’.
Read moreIt’s quite fitting that there is a cemetery on the grounds of Oscott College in which thousands of people, bishops, priests and laypeople, are buried. Death and dying are part of the daily life of priestly ministry and there is no harm for seminarians in being reminded of the reality of their future priestly lives, as well as their life to come after death.
Read moreThe human development team at St Mary’s College, namely Fr Paul Johnson and Pete Smallwood (both accredited counsellors) first launched the idea of delivering a bespoke counselling course with the second and third-year seminarian groups.
Read moreThe Oscotian Magazine is our official publication. Edited by our students, it collects up the best stories of the year from our students, staff, alumni and friends.
Want to experience some history? Our tours have been running for over a decade, removing the mystery of the college and giving the general public a sense of what we do here.
Everything that’s coming up, from tours and formation events to symposiums and times of prayer.