Independent co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day school
Motto
Seize the day
Religious affiliation(s)
Diocese of Newcastle
Denomination
Anglicanism
Established
1998; 26 years ago (1998)
Founder
Bishop William Tyrrell
Principal
Paul Humble
Head of school
Paul Humble
Staff
Mrs. Piggot
Years
Early learning and K–12
Enrolment
770
Houses
Darcy
Fletcher
Thomas
Currey
Website
btac.nsw.edu.au
Bishop Tyrrell Anglican College (abbreviated as BTAC) is an Independent co-educational school from Preschool to Year 12, owned by the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle located in the Newcastle suburb of Fletcher, New South Wales, Australia.[1]
^"Anglican Church of Australia (Bishop Tyrrell Anglican College) Order 1999" (PDF). www.legislation.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
and 20 Related for: Bishop Tyrrell Anglican College information
straits. Tyrrell was brought up as an Anglican and around 1869 he attended Rathmines School, near Dublin. He was educated from 1873 at Midleton College, an...
Below is list of the 62 Anglican schools in the state of New South Wales. New South Wales portal Christianity portal Schools portal List of non-government...
Elizabeth (1619–93), who married Sir Timothy Tyrrell, of Oakley, Buckinghamshire. She was the mother of James Tyrrell. He became prominent after meeting James...
Anglican Diocese of Brisbane, also known as Anglican Church Southern Queensland, is based in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The diocesan bishop's seat...
English Anglican clergyman and historian Charles Green (bishop) (1864–1944), Welsh Anglicanbishop Edmund Tyrrell Green (1864–1937), English Anglican curate...
recent years as a result of amalgamations which have produced multi-campus colleges consisting of Junior and Senior campuses. While most schools are comprehensive...
Anthony Tyrrell (1552 – c. 1610) was an English Roman Catholic renegade priest and spy. Anthony Tyrrell, born in 1552, was son of George Tyrrell. His grandfather...
Closebourne, to the new AnglicanBishop of Newcastle for the sum of 1,600 pounds. Upon its purchase by Bishop William Tyrrell in 1849, Closebourne House...
Gillieston Heights, New South Wales, and a year 12 student at BishopTyrrellAnglicanCollege. She has an older sister, younger sister and younger brother...
elder brother Ernest became Bishop of Newcastle then of Chichester), he was educated at Eton College and Exeter College, Oxford and ordained in 1866...
academic of Trinity College, Dublin Clive Ross (born 1989), rugby footballer William Armstrong Russell (1821–1879), AnglicanBishop of North China Sir...
Inculturation in India, Ashgate Publishing, 2007.[13] Anthony Tyrrell Hanson, Beyond Anglicanism, Darton, Longman & Todd, 1965, p.65. [14] J. Herbert Kane...
OBE (known as De Witt; 10 January 1879 – 3 April 1961) was the 7th AnglicanBishop of Newcastle in Australia from 1931 until his retirement in 1958. De...
after the city where its cathedral is located. Occasionally, when the bishop's seat has been moved from one city to another, the diocese may retain both...
Glennie arrived in Sydney in the party of Dr William Tyrrell, first AnglicanBishop of Newcastle. Tyrrell appointed Glennie as deacon to the Moreton Bay district...
Bouverie Pusey was elected a fellow of the same college in 1823. On 13 June 1824, Newman was made an Anglican deacon at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. Ten...
outstanding preacher as well as a strong polemical writer defending Anglicanism, Stillingfleet was known as "the beauty of holiness" for his good looks...
until the appointment of William Tyrrell, as the first Bishop of Newcastle in 1846. The property was passed on to Tyrrell, and in 1854 the land was resumed...