Legacy Giving – Fr. Peter Kenney SJ Legacy Society | Boys School Kildare | Clongowes Wood College

Leaving a legacy to Clongowes in your Will

To discuss leaving a legacy to Clongowes please call the Foundation office +353 (0)45 902 334 or email Antoinette Kelly at antoinettekelly@clongowes.net or Joe Rooney at jrooney@clongowes.net .

Remembering Clongowes in your Will is a meaningful way to leave a lasting legacy for those who will follow in your footsteps.  Past pupils and friends of the College can support its future by including Clongowes Wood College as a beneficiary in their estate. By informing the College or the Foundation of your intentions, you become a member of the Fr Peter Kenney Legacy Society.  A special plaque in the Boys’ Chapel honours members of the Society for their benevolence in leaving a bequest to Clongowes.

Those listed below—along with many others, including some who choose to remain anonymous—have made a remarkable contribution to the College as it continues to evolve and maintain its special place at the forefront of Irish education. All benefactors are remembered annually at our Mass of Thanksgiving for Benefactors and Donors, which takes place each December.

Bequests may be directed towards the Alberto Hurtado Bursary Programme,  Alberto Hurtado Endowment Fund, Development or general charitable purposes at the College.

When remembering Clongowes in your will please use the following information

Registered name: Clongowes Wood College Foundation (Clongowes Foundation)
Registered address: Clongowes Wood College, Clane, Co Kildare
Registered charity number:  (CHY 16175) / (RCN 20057688)

Recent Legacy Giving

Dr Claire Carney & Dr J Aidan Carney

The Foundation and the College are deeply grateful to Dr Claire Carney (1939–2025) for her generous legacy gift to the Alberto Hurtado Endowment Fund, made in memory of her husband Dr J. Aidan Carney OC ’52 (1934–2024).

Claire visited Clongowes in June 2024, taking the opportunity to see her husband’s alma mater and to express her support for the Alberto Hurtado Bursary Programme which offers the opportunity of a Clongowes education to boys who may otherwise not realise their potential due to socio-economic disadvantage. Her legacy gift to the Alberto Hurtado Endowment Fund will both honour Aidan’s memory and help future Bursary students to reach their full potential for many years to come.

Dr Claire Carney FRCPCH and Dr J. Aidan Carney MD, FRCPI, FRCP were long based in Rochester, Minnesota, where Aidan served as Emeritus Professor of Pathology at the Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine.

The Foundation remains profoundly indebted to all who choose to honour their time at Clongowes—or commemorate a loved one—through Legacy Giving.

 Richard Robinson 1920-2019

The Foundation and College are immensely grateful to the late Richard (Dick), Robinson who in his will, generously bequeathed a substantial legacy to the Foundation. Born in 1920, Richard lived into his 100th year.

Richard Robinson of Newberry Hall, Carbury, County Kildare, attended Clongowes between 1932 and 1938, where his uncle Fr. Mathias Bodkin S.J. was the Prefect of Studies. Richard’s maternal grandfather was Judge Mathias Bodkin K.C., author, journalist and nationalist M.P. for North Roscommon (1892 -95), who was educated at Tullabeg before its amalgamation with Clongowes. Richard’s father also attended Clongowes as did his Uncle Richard, who died in his final year on the morning of May 20th, 1900, after a brief illness. His brother Norman, who left Clongowes in 1935, was an officer pilot in the RAF who was killed in action in 1943, after many years of service, at the age of 26.

On leaving Clongowes Richard trained as an aeronautical engineer in Handley Pages in London whilst studying aeronautical engineering.

With the war looming he returned to Ireland and joined the Irish Air Corps, in Baldonnell where he served from 1939 to 1945 while simultaneously completing his studies. After the war he worked in Aer Lingus before returning to Newberry Demesne where he developed a deep knowledge in sheep husbandry.

Richard died on 24th October 2019 and was predeceased by his wife Margaret who was sadly killed in a car accident in 1971 a few years after they were married. His sister, Nora, died in 1984.

Richard’s legacy helped fund the refurbishment of the Infirmary and support the Alberto Hurtado Endowment Fund thereby ensuring that his benevolence will positively impact on the lives of future generations of Clongowes’ students.

The above is a shortened version of an Obituary published in 2019.

Joe Rooney (OC ‘1979), Clongowes Wood College Foundation with help from James Robinson, Executor of the Estate

In December 2022, Clongowes Foundation unveiled a plaque outside the Infirmary to honour Richard Robinson OC’38 and his legacy gift to Clongowes.  Richard’s legacy helped fund the refurbishment of the Infirmary (originally built in 1872) and support the Alberto Hurtado Endowment Fund thereby ensuring that his benevolence will positively impact on the lives of future generations of Clongowes’ students.

We were honoured on the day to be joined by Margaret Horne, second cousin of Richard who shared her memories of Richard and expressed how delighted he would have been for his legacy to support students in the College into the future.

Fr Rector Michael Sheil, Headmaster Chris Lumb, Margaret Horne, Joe Rooney at the unveiling of the Plaque to honour Richard Robinson’s legacy gift.

Clongowes first recorded bequest – Mrs Olivia Taaffe

The Editorial of the 1919 Clongownian acknowledged a donation of £300 bequeathed by the late Mrs. Taaffe of Smarmore Castle, County Louth, for the New Chapel.  Olivia Mary Blake was born in 1832 and married John Joseph Taaffe in 1867.  The Taaffes were a well-known, land-owning family who, legend has it, came to Ireland from Wales in 1196.  Their son George Robert was in Clongowes from 1882 to 1884 and died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-two in Davos Platz, Switzerland, where his mother had taken him.  Olivia had previously donated an exquisite statue of St. Joseph and the divine infant to the College in 1896 in Memory of her son, this statue and dedication plaque can be seen today in the Quadrangle.  Olivia Taaffe was a generous benefactor to Clongowes and many local causes throughout her life.

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