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St. Pius X Catholic School (Dallas) St. Rita Catholic School (Dallas) - The school opened in 1964, and after that the building was added on to seven times. [3] St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School (Dallas) - It has separate facilities for grades Pre-Kindergarten through 2 (lower school) and grades 3-8 (upper school): [4] the upper school is in ...
The Diocese of Dallas (Latin: Diœcesis Dallasensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Catholic Church in North Texas in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of San Antonio. The diocese was founded on July 15, 1890. The mother church is the National Shrine Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Dallas.
Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham (Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter-Catholic Church) 29°47′45″N 95°29′00″W / 29.795849°N 95.483340°W / 29.795849; -95.483340 ( Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham (Houston
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church: built 1907 1991 NRHP-listed 1703 Dublin Street: Mobile, Alabama: Archdiocese of Mobile, parish church. St. Joseph's Parish was established in 1857. St. Matthew's Catholic Church: built 1913
The church was built in 1872 and was located at Bryan and Ervay Streets, near present-day St. Paul Station. [1] In 1890, Dallas was established as a diocese, and Sacred Heart became the diocesan cathedral of Dallas with Bishop Thomas Brennan acting as the first bishop.
The 34-acre (14 ha; 140,000 m 2) school campus [17] is located on Inwood Road in North Dallas, Texas, adjacent to St. Rita Catholic School, south-west of the intersection of the Dallas North Tollway and Interstate 635 (LBJ Freeway).
The Louis Wagner Home (RHTL #6910, [24] 1979), 5320 Live Oak St.—This house was built in 1884 by German immigrant and Dallas businessman Louis Wagner with his wife Anna, the daughter of early Swiss Avenue settler Jacob Pretz. The house was originally located at 2917 Bryan St. but was relocated to the district in 1977 to avoid demolition. [25]
The Sisters of Saint Rita are a Roman Catholic religious institute. They were founded in 1911 by Father Hugolinus Dach, an Augustinian priest in Würzburg , Germany. Originally developed as a lay group to care for families, in 1917 the Sisters took the habit, and started to say the daily Marian office.