Carysfort Training College was set up as a training college for Catholic girls who wished to become teachers. The college was founded and run by the
Sisters of Mercy. The college developed further when 'Sedes Sapientiae' (Seat of Wisdom) Training School for girls of
Catherine McAuley Baggot Street (becoming a recognised Teacher Training college in 1883) and in 1903 moved to Carysfort in Blackrock. The Diploma in Primary School Education awarded by the college was recognised by the Irish Government's Department of Education for teaching in primary schools. The teacher training course, which had been a 2-year "Diploma in Primary Education" course, was lengthened to three years degree in 1974. In 1975 reforms in the education system in Ireland saw Carysfort become a recognised college of the
National University of Ireland along with other teacher training colleges such as
Mary Immaculate College in
Limerick and St. Patrick's Training College,
Drumcondra. Male students were admitted for the first time in 1975 as well. These reforms saw Carysfort and other institutions award the BEd Degree for their teacher training programmes, in 1977. The college also offered a postgraduate qualification in primary school teaching. In 1982 a new library, a new 700-seat auditorium, a sports centre and an audio-visual centre were officially opened by the then Minister for Education. In 1984 the government refused to allow Carysfort to provide a joint Masters in Education course with
University College Dublin. In the mid-1980s the possibility of establishing a National College of Music and Dramatic Arts on the Carysfort campus was investigated, other proposals were to locate a Regional Technical College on the site.
Heads Sr. Regina (Teresita Durkan) was the last President of the college, serving from 1974 until 1988. Other presidents or principals included
Sister Mary Liguori (Alice Keenan) who served three times as principal, (1877–82, 1888–94, and 1900–06), she purchased Carysfort Park for the college, and Mother Teresita McCormack, President from the 1936 until 1968.
Staff Noted past academics at the college include
Seamus Heaney,
Eoin MacNeill, Pat Wall and
Éamon de Valera (Professor of Mathematics, 1906–1916, The organist and composer
Vincent O'Brien served as professor of music from 1908 until his death in 1948. Others include the geographer Sr. Stella Fitzpatrick I.B.V.M, the writer
Sophia Hillan, former senator
Marie-Louise O'Donnell taught speech and drama and the mathematician
John B. Cosgrave lectured in Carysfort, ==Closure==