History
St Finbar’s Catholic Primary School Sans Souci was established in 1926 when Fr John Driscoll arranged for the sisters of St Joseph, led by principal Sr Elaine Ryan RSJ, to set up a school in the original church building, which still stands today. Travelling to school each day on a steam train, the sisters taught around 135 students in one building.
In 1936, the Sisters of Mercy (Wilcannia-Forbes Congregation) established a convent at Sans Souci and took over the running of the school with Sr Mary Claver RSM as the first Mercy principal. The school continued to share the church building until 1959 when the new church was opened which remains our current church.
Sydney Catholic Schools eventually assumed leadership over the school, appointing the first lay principal, Mrs Evelyn Graves in 1984, which led to the school being entirely staffed by lay teachers to this day.
Charism
Our patron saint, St Finbar, inspires us to be contemplative and self-reflective. His life of prayer, peace, and devotion calls to us a relationship with God and benefits us in this busy world. Through our school prayer, we capture our combined charism to foster in students a desire to make a difference in others’ lives.
The Sisters of St Joseph, whose founder was St Mary of the Cross Mackillop, inspires us to ‘never see a need without doing something about it’. This calls us to be people of action.
The Sisters of Mercy inspire us to live focusing on the values of unity, respect, compassion, diversity, dignity, justice, equality, service, and hospitality.
Our school motto encompasses all our values inviting us to be the best we can be and to ‘shine on the world like bright stars’ (Philippians 2:15).