The
Origin
In 1865, a year after St. Xavier's Church was completed; the Society of
St. Vincent de Paul under the presidency of an eminent lay catholic,
T.C. Loughnan, Esq., took up the matter of education under its serious
consideration and set up a special School Committee with Mr. Charles Cook
as its chairman. At its meeting of December 27, the Committee passed the
following resolution that was forwarded to Bishop Steins. "That as
the want of an additional English School for boys, this has been a long
felt need by the inhabitants of Poona, an effort to establish such an
institution be made without delay." The Committee opened a
subscription list for the necessary funds and the Cantonment authorities
agreed to give gratis a piece of land on the East Street. However, both
the subscription and the piece of land were inadequate and so a year later
on December 15, the Committee proposed a new plan to the Bishop. The
proposed St. Vincent de Paul's Boys School would be started by the Bishop
with the active collaboration of the Society which "resolved to
guarantee to Your Lordship a monthly sum of Rs.100 with a proviso that
should we be able to make up the balance of Rs.50 as originally promised,
the same will be made good. We further bind ourselves to collect and make
over to Your Lordship the sum of Rs.3123 already subscribed and to
endeavour to continue making up the stipulated sum of Rs.8000." To
This the Bishop agreed.
In
March 1867, news arrived in Poona that Bishop Steins was being promoted
and sent as Archbishop of Calcutta, and so the Poona Conference of the
St.
Vincent de Paul Society requested that it be allowed to name the upcoming
school as "Bishop Steins Boys' School" in order to perpetuate,
as they wrote "your name as a friend and Patron of Education which
you have proved your self to be ever since your arrival in Bombay".
The name of the school, however, was never changed and Mr. Charles Cook
agreed to give up his own bungalow (at the site of the present school
library) for the purpose of the school. It would be rented for Rs.50 per
month.
On
Friday, April 5, 1867, Mr. Cook shifted from his house to a new one and
next day two Fathers arrived from Bombay to start the school: Joseph
Brunner and John McDonnough. The school was started on Tuesday, April 9,
with just 5 pupils. The very next day, Fr. Brunner wrote to the Bishop:
"Boys are coming every day, though they are not numerous till now. On
Sunday last, St. Vincent's School Commission met and showed most zealously
to give us any kind of help and encouragement, which in faith we are
greatly in need of. The Rs.50 Your Reverend gave me are gone to the last
farthing and I can defy all the filoux de Paris and de London to rob me of
money..."A month later, Fr. Brunner had more interesting details to
give to the Bishop: "Alas, the days are so short here in St.
Vincent's School and yet rather than complain we give thanks to God that
however short they are - we have nearly fifty boys all well disposed and
doing nicely. I received these poor Portuguese (Goan) boys, many of them
without parents, or sons of butlers and cooks for One Rupee per month,
which all paid most willingly in advance. For the others the fees are at
Rs.4 for one chap (T. McDonough's) and Rs.3 for mine. But I am in need of
an assistant teacher who be sent without delay.... My money nearly gone
again, as I paid to Mme. St. Catherine (Superior of the Convent) a bill of
Rs.66.4 for things she purchased for us. From St. Vincent's Society no
cash has been received as yet, as they will be able to collect some only
in about a months time, people being absent from Poona now. Besides our
support, we should have furniture, cots, chairs, table, chest of drawers
etc. I suppose you will hardly be able to send us many things. I hope
we'll go on well and the school will be a success."
Progress
Mr. Cook's bungalow was purchased in August 1867 for Rs.12,000. But the
increase in the number of the students and the fact the "purchased
spot is much exposed and infected by the poisoned air that arises from the
outhouses in the rear of the Police Barracks", compelled Bishop
Meurin to apply to the Cantonment for a piece of land in the neighbourhood
of Liberty Cinema. The request was turned down and consequently a wing had
to be added (ground floor of the old "Red Building"). Its
inauguration on January 10, 1868 was reported by the BOMBAY GAZETTE
(January 14) in the following glowing terms:- "The new school-room of
the Society of St. Vincent de Paul was blessed and declared open a few
days ago. It is a spacious, elegant and substantial structure, and has
sprung up as it were by the touch of a magical wand. Wonderful people,
these Jesuits! Nothing appears to checkmate their progress. The word
'impossible' after the great Napoleon is not to be found in their
vocabulary. Within a period of a few years, look at their convents,
chapels, schools, etc., certainly their energy is exemplary, for they
fully demonstrated the saying of the great Prince of Painters - nothing is
denied to well directed labour, and nothing can be attained without
it." Naturally, the same year the Government recognised the school,
and sanctioned Rs.936 as grand-in-aid.
As
the number of pupils kept on increasing, more classrooms had to be
constructed. In 1882, a top storey was added at the cost of Rs.14,000 and
a year later Payne's Bungalow (near the present cycle-stand) was purchased
for Rs.4000 and used for Jesuit Residence. In 1909, the roof of this
bungalow collapsed, almost killing Fr. F.X. Gallati. The adjoining Meade's
bungalow was bought and within a year Br. Joseph Heagele put up a new
residence for the Fathers. The second floor was added in 1935-36).
In
1908, the school purchased Hanson's bungalow (parish hall compound) and in
1922 exchanged it for Lavina Hall or Luxa Bungalow, which the Bishop had
earlier purchased from a certain Laxman. This bungalow was turned into a
boys' hostel and finally replaced by the Gulati Hall. In 1920 a porch was
added to the Red Building and a wing towards the West. The work progressed
fast and the Governor of Bombay, Sir George Lloyd, inaugurated the new
wing on the feast of St. Vincent, July 19, 1921. Two years later, the
play-field beyond Maneck Nullah (dividing the city from the Cantonment)
was acquired for Rs.22,000 and the nullah covered in the early sixties.
Fr. Riklin constructed the imposing wing with the statue of the Patron
Saint from 1933 to 1935, and 25 years later Father Schoch replaced the
original Red Building with the present office block, library, laboratories
and classrooms, completed in 1963 at the cost of Rs. 8,41,910. Soon after,
the AV Room was furnished and the stadium built in time for the Centenary
Celebration in 1967. In the year 1977, Fr. Edmund D'Souza extended the
primary section by one floor. Fr. K. Misquitta constructed the second
storey of the building in 1985. Extension of the stadium started in
October 1999 and was completed in May 2000 by Fr. K. Misquitta.
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