Tristan O'Neill (aka Muttley McLad) Vocals, Bass. Kevin Hooper (aka Winston Dread) Drums. Peter Bosley (aka Al O'Peesha) Guitar. Discover releases, reviews, credits, songs, and more about The Macc Lads - Live At Leeds (The Who?) at Discogs. Complete your The Macc Lads collection.
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- Tristan O'neill Macclesfield
Get weavin', in Macclesfield, Get weavin', and get your knackers feeled. Kiss your crack but miss her lips, She's got a scabby face and she smells of chips, She's got a scabby face and she smells of chips. I said, hey up my love, I've got a suggestion, Hey up my love, will you feel my errection, Hey up my love, do you want a meat injection? Coaches – Mike Ransom, Paul Bartle, Simon Boyd, Tristan Wood & Lloyd Lamprecht. MRUFC Playing top – On the O’Neill’s on-line store. Macclesfield rugby Under 11’s request all players must have a responsible adult present for all training and matches. British Flag: 113: 126: Ivy House: Helen Laurence: 24: 36: Tristan O'Neill: Harrington Growlers: 124: 104: Waters Green Rams: Martin Biss Stuart Mills: 24 24: 36.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The King's School in Macclesfield | |
Motto | nil nisi malis terrori |
Established | 1502 |
Type | Independent School |
Religion | Church of England |
Head of Foundation | Dr. Stephen Coyne |
Location | Cheshire SK10 1DA United Kingdom |
Students | c. 1500 |
Gender | Mixed 3-11, Separate boys and girls divisions 11-16, Mixed 16-18 |
Ages | 3 to 18 |
Houses | 4 |
Colours | |
Website | www.kingsmac.co.uk |
Coordinates: 53°15′48″N2°07′57″W / 53.2633°N 2.1324°W |
Tristan O Neill Macclesfield
The King's School in Macclesfield is an independent school for day pupils in Macclesfield, Cheshire, England, and a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. It was founded in 1502 by Sir John Percyvale, a former Lord Mayor of London, as Macclesfield Grammar School.
The school motto is nil nisi malis terrori - 'No terror, except to the bad'.
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History
The school operated as a direct-grant school, offering scholarships for boys from state elementary schools from 1926 until 1946, when its application to continue as a direct grant grammar school was refused and it became fully independent.[1][2]The junior school was opened in 1961 and the school bought the old Macclesfield High School for Girls to set up a girls' division which opened in 1993 (the Sixth Form had been co-educational since 1986).[3]The Boys' Division and Sixth Form are located on the Cumberland Street site and the Junior School, Infants and Girls' Division are all situated on Fence Avenue.
Academia
The school follows the standard curriculum of GCSE and A-Levels in the senior school, in the Year 11 and the sixth form respectively.
Most recently (2009), students have achieved over 76% A or B grade at A level, with a 100% pass rate, and 62% As and A*s at GCSE.
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Extracurricular
The school takes great pride in its musical exploits, particularly since the Foundation Choir won BBC Songs of Praise Choir of the Year 2003. The choir take bi-annual trips abroad to perform their repertoire across Europe, having recently visited Barcelona, Levico Terme, Strasbourg and most recently Lake Geneva (2008). The school is equipped with a recording studio and many practise rooms.
Tristan O Neill Macclesfield Fc
Acting is also a popular extracurricular activity and the school performs 2 or 3 plays a year (one by the Boys' Division and Sixth form, one by the Girls' Division, and one by the Juniors). Recent titles include Cyrano de Bergerac, Under Milk Wood, Beauty and the Beast, Wind in the Willows and Alice in Wonderland.
Trips abroad are arranged by several departments fairly regularly. In addition to annual foreign language exchange visits, these include the the history and classics departments. Pupils are involved in biennial World Challenge Expeditions, recently to places such as Morrocco and Equador.
Tristan O Neill Macclesfield Uk
School sports include rugby, hockey, netball, cheerleading, and cricket and there are several teams for boys and girls throughout the school. The school has a outstanding reputation for all sports, but especially rugby and cricket, where they play on a very strong circuit of the very best sporting schools in the north. In recent years the boy's rugby team has been enjoyed an unbeaten season and won the Rugby World 'Team of the Month' accolade twice. In Cricket,the school has won the County Cup numerous times across all age groups and the boys' first team have enjoyed many successful seasons. In hockey, The 2006 Boys' XI were national champions and have had 2 players representing their country.
In 2007, the Girls Division started cheerleading with Racheal Burrows (national champion and 3rd in Europe). Cheerleading has been very successful at the school and in 2008 the Kings Cubs (a mixture of year 8 and 9 girls) and the King's Lions (a group of year 11 girls) both became national champions in their respective age groups. The King's Kittens, who were in year 7, came 5th.
The outdoor activities club is popular at the school and often organises trips to Yorkshire or the peak district. Activities include walking, climbing and caving. On Wednesday afternoons the outdoor activities club also features as a VIth form activity.
Notable alumni
Tristan O'neill Macclesfield
- Peter Moores, ex-England Cricket Coach
- Rev. Thomas Taylor, priest and historian
- Alan Beith, politician
- Ian Curtis and Stephen Morris, of the rock band Joy Division
- Stuart Wilson, Big Brother 2004 contestant
- Peter Kenyon, Chelsea Chief Executive
- Duncan Robinson, master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
- Michael Jackson, former Channel 4 Chief Executive
- John Bradshaw, the chief prosecutor of Charles I and the first man to sign his death warrant
- Sir Eric Jones[4], Previous Director of GCHQ
- Tristan Mark O'Neill, who went on to form the infamous politically-incorrect punk band the Macc Lads. He has since made his mark as a local historian.
Publications
Numerous teachers from the school have published books, such as
- Banner, Gillian (1999). Holocaust Literature: Schulz, Levi, Spiegelman and the Memory of the Offence. Vallentine Mitchell. ISBN 978-0853033714.
- Palazzo, Lynda (2002). Christina Rossetti's Feminist Theology. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0333920336.
- Hill, David (2003). For King's and Country. Chameleon Press.
References
- ^Parliamentary Debates, House of Commons, 31st May 1946, columns 236–239
- ^'War and Peace'. The King's School in Macclesfield. http://www.kingsmac.co.uk/school/history/history9.html. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^'New Beginnings'. The King's School in Macclesfield. http://www.kingsmac.co.uk/school/history/history10.html. Retrieved 2009-06-07.
- ^D. R. Nicoll, Jones, Sir Eric Malcolm (1907-1986), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2004
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