Darlington School: Private Boarding School in Georgia
Darlington School: Private Boarding School in Rome, GA
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Patrick Collier ’08

History Teacher, Grades 6-8

Patrick ’08 has taught middle grades history since 2014. He is the head coach for the boys and girls middle school track team and serves as an assistant coach for the varsity football team. Patrick holds a B.S. in General Social Science Education from Auburn University and completed his student teaching in U.S. History at Dadeville High School in Tallapoosa, Ala. Patrick and his wife, Anna, have a daughter named Ansley.

Contact Information
Courses
Academic Club
Ancient History
Club
Exploratory: Consumer Science
Study Skills
World History
Teams
Boys M.S. Track and Field

Head Coach

Girls M.S. Track and Field

Head Coach

College Education
B.S. Auburn University

Brown Dinner honors faculty, staff

May 4, 2023
Darlington School honored outstanding faculty and staff members at the annual Brown Faculty Appreciation Dinner, hosted by the Board of Trustees on Thursday, May 4.

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Fifth-Grader wins Geography Bee

January 26, 2017
Fifth-grader Ethan von Bergen has qualified to represent Darlington School in the state round of the National Geographic Bee by winning Darlington’s Geo Bee on Jan. 18 in Thatcher Hall.

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Collier retires after 16 years of service to Darlington

May 29, 2015
Perree Collier, science teacher for grades 3-5, retired this month after 16 years of service to Darlington.

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Professional development grants awarded to faculty members

May 4, 2015
Darlington School awarded professional development funds to faculty members in March following a competitive grant application process.

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Through the Eyes of a Tiger: An Interview with Mr. Collier

Academic Administration | , February 22, 2015
Sophomore Emily Orr interviews ELA-8 history teacher and football coach Patrick Collier ('08).

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Collier ('08) to teach middle school history, coach two sports

August 6, 2014
Patrick Collier ('08) has joined the Darlington Community as a history teacher for grades 6-7, head coach of the middle school track and field teams, and assistant coach of the middle school football team.

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School welcomes new faculty and staff

August 6, 2014
Darlington is pleased to welcome the following new faculty and staff members for the 2014-15 school year.

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Former Tigers making an impact at FBS level

September 3, 2008
Just as Darlington is making the drop from Class AA to A, a half-dozen former Tigers are making names for themselves at college football’s highest level, the NCAA’s Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly known as Division I-A). When Patrick Collier (’08) learned he had survived the walk-on cut at Auburn University in mid-August, he became the sixth Tiger to land on a FBS roster, joining Chantz McClinic (’04) and Derricus Ellis (’08) at Wake Forest University, Ryan McMahon (’06) and Shawn Powell (’07) at Florida State University, and Luke Hyder (’06) at the U.S. Air Force Academy.<br /><br /> “I think it is a tremendous honor to have six Division I-A kids from any athletic program, particularly a Class A program,” said Tommy Atha, Darlington’s head varsity football coach. “It shows tremendous interest in and enthusiasm for football at Darlington. I think it also speaks well of our school because coaches want to come here to look for kids who will be an asset to their programs both athletically and academically.”<br /><br /> McClinic enters his fifth-year senior season for the nationally ranked Demon Deacons as the starter at the weakside linebacker position. He has played in more than 30 games for Wake, including 11 in 2007 when he became a full-time starter. McClinic played in a backup role his sophomore season, but saw plenty of time on special teams when Wake Forest won the 2006 ACC championship. In 2003, as a senior at Darlington, McClinic was a first-team All-Area player at fullback and linebacker, leading the Tigers to the second round of the state playoffs.<br /><br /> Jim Grobe, head coach at Wake Forest, said he’s been pleased with what McClinic has done. “He’s been a really good player for us for a couple of years now,” said the 2006 ACC and National Coach of the Year. “He’s a good leader for us. He’s got a great work ethic … he’s good both on and off the field. Obviously we’ve got to have really good football players here for us to have a chance in the Atlantic Coast Conference, but the No. 1 thing we look for is character. We had a great example of that in Chantz, and when we knew that it got us really excited about Derricus.”<br /><br /> Ellis, McClinic’s half-brother, graduated from Darlington in May after signing with Wake Forest in February. Ellis committed in the summer of 2007 and, later, earned first-team All-Area honors as a defensive end. According to Wake Forest assistant athletic director for media relations Steve Shutt, he will be redshirted this year but may dress and travel with the squad.<br /><br /> In August, Powell learned that he would become a starter in just his freshman season at Florida State. He signed with FSU in 2006, but did not enroll until 2007 after a stellar three-sport career at Darlington, where he was All-Area in football and basketball. During his senior season, Powell averaged 51 yards per punt on his way to Class AA All-State honors. He made his first start when the Seminoles played Western Carolina Sept. 6.<br /><br /> “Shawn is the most gifted kicker I have been around in more than 15 years of coaching,” Atha said. “He’s got a chance to be really special. He’s also a great young man that people flock to. We’re very excited about the opportunity he has with Florida State.”<br /><br /> McMahon exploded onto the scene in 2007 as a redshirt freshman for the Seminoles. He took every snap in every game at center, a move he made from defensive tackle in the offseason. He only gave up two sacks in more than 900 plays and was named to the Freshman All-America first team. Three times, McMahon went the entire game without missing an assignment. His name was even added to the watch list for the Rimington Trophy, named after former All-American and Nebraska center Dave Rimington and awarded annually to the nation’s top center. McMahon was also named preseason All-ACC third team by Phil Steele.<br /><br /> McMahon came to Darlington as a junior in 2004 where he quickly became a dominant force. He was a two-time All-Area player and first-team All-State his senior season, helping the Tigers to a second-round playoff appearance. “Ryan is the most dominant lineman I’ve ever coached,” Atha said. “He is so explosive, has great hips, and is a very good athlete overall – all attributes that serve him well when you consider the fact that he may have to block a huge defensive tackle on one play and a fast linebacker on the next.”<br /><br /> Hyder received an appointment to the Air Force after graduating with McMahon in 2006. Also an All-Area fullback and linebacker for the Tigers, Hyder has been an impact player for the Falcons on special teams. He is currently in the rotation at the “Z” receiver position on offense after moving over from safety in the spring. The staff at Air Force is excited about Hyder’s future.<br /><br /> “Luke Hyder is exactly the kind of young man that we want here at the Academy,” said Mike Thiessen, Air Force receivers coach. “He’s an extremely hard worker, is a team player, and brings a very high energy level to our team.”<br /><br /> Hyder and Collier were close friends when Hyder graduated from Darlington in 2006 during Collier’s sophomore year. Much of the work ethic that helped Collier make the walk-on cut at Auburn, he says he learned from Hyder, whose tireless and relentless conditioning helped him to a 49-0 record and state championship at the 171-pound division on the wrestling mat his senior year.<br /><br /> “There is no question that when we measure a great work ethic and commitment in a Darlington football player, it’s Hyder and Collier who set the standard,” Atha said. “They weren’t great players for us just on Friday nights; they were great players in practice, in the film room, the offseason … who dedicated themselves to becoming the best player they could be. And I could not be prouder of any former player than I am of Patrick. It was his dream to play football for the team he grew up loving, and he’s living that.”<br /><br /> Although all of these former Tigers are playing for quality football programs that have opportunities to compete at a high level nationally and for respective conference championships, it was their academic performance that opened those doors. <br /><br /> And Atha is confident that the reason college coaches like to recruit at Darlington is because they know they are getting well-rounded student-athletes. “I think they know that when our kids get to them they will be well-coached,” he said. “I also believe that if a player graduates with a Darlington diploma, he will be self-disciplined and come to them with a great work ethic.”<br /><br /> Grobe agrees. “The thing we saw in Chantz and Derricus was that not only do they have good football ability with a good work ethic and good character, but they come from a great school,” he said. “With them coming from Darlington School, it’s a home run, because at Wake Forest you’ve got to be committed to academics to leave here with a degree. So not only did we get a good football player in Chantz and a good football player in Derricus … we felt like we got two kids who will come into Wake Forest and leave with a degree.”

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Knight named Optimist Club Student of the Year

January 29, 2008
Outstanding achievement has won senior Katherine Knight the honor of being named Noon Optimist Student of the Year in the "All-Around" category.

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Seven named to All-Area Football Team

January 8, 2008
Seven Darlington students were named to the Rome News-Tribune's 2007 All-Area Football Team this month.

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