St Killian's College (Irish: Coláiste Naomh Cillian, also known colloquially as Garron Tower) is a secondary school located in the Glens of Antrim area of Northern Ireland.
[1] The college grounds are situated on a plateau approximately 200 feet (61 m) above the Antrim Coast Road (part of the A2) at Garron Point, overlooking the North Channel and out towards the Mull of Kintyre, Scotland.
[citation needed] The grounds include a golf course, several sports pitches, a wooded forest, several gardens and a seawall.
[citation needed] A number of artworks, including by local artists such as Charles McAuley and Sam McLarnon, hang in this old section of the school.
On the canopy above the High Altar are the words "Laudate Pueri Dominum" which translates as "Boys, Praise the Lord".
[citation needed]A set of stables, subsequently converted to dormitories, now house music, languages and business studies classrooms.
[citation needed] A block used for IT, home economics, art and science is situated on the site of the old tennis courts.
[clarification needed] About 400 yards north of the post office, at the bottom of Dunmaul Hill, is a "water driven" pump house where - in March 1956 - a boarder at the college died.
At the south end of the college grounds there is a wooded area in which the original owner's dog, Urisk, is buried.
The headstone remains and on it is written:"Here Urisk lies and let the truth be told, This faithful dog was blind, infirm and old.