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Holy Name (Girls), Pomona (Closed 1949) (reopened as Pomona Catholic High School) Los Angeles College, the junior seminary of the archdiocese; Mount Carmel (Closed 1976) Our Lady Queen of Angels, Los Angeles (Closed 1982) Pater Noster, Los Angeles (Closed 1991) Pius X.Downey (merged with St. Mathias 1995) Notre Dame (Girls), Sunland (Closed 1960s)
The main page for this category is Holy Name Seminary. Pages in category "Holy Name Seminary alumni" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
St. Joseph's Seminary - major seminary run by the Josephites, founded in 1888; later an independent academic seminary, but residential-only beginning in the early 1970s Epiphany Apostolic College - former minor seminary run by the Josephites; founded in Baltimore in 1889 and later moved near Newburgh in 1925; eventually closed for seminary ...
Clonliffe College (Holy Cross College), for the Archdiocese of Dublin was founded in 1859, [59] opened in 1861 and closed as a seminary in June 2000. [ 60 ] Mungret College , Limerick, was a Limerick diocesan seminary until 1888 and a Jesuit school from 1882 until 1974.
Daniel Murphy High School was originally the home of Los Angeles College, a Catholic junior seminary.A notable alumnus of Los Angeles College is Cardinal Roger Mahony.The seminary existed on the site from the time it was built in 1926 until 1953 when it moved to its new home in the San Fernando Valley and was renamed Our Lady Queen of Angels Seminary.
Membership includes priests, seminarians and brothers. Servants of the Holy Family (SHF) was the first traditional Latin Mass religious community for men begun in the United States. [1] The introduction of the Mass of Paul VI was a catalyst for such foundations in the Church. [2]
From the 1920s until about 1971, the Society operated St. Edward Seminary in Kenmore, Washington. The grounds now form Saint Edward State Park and Bastyr University. For a brief period in the 1990s, the Sulpicians were also involved in teaching at St. John's Seminary in Camarillo, the college seminary for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
Roger Mahony was born on February 27, 1936, in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles, the son of Victor and Loretta (née Baron) Mahony. He has a twin brother, Louis, and an older brother, Neil. Roger Mahony attended St. Charles Borromeo Grammar School in North Hollywood and Los Angeles College. [3]