Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Thomas Seminary building. The St. Thomas Seminary in southeast Denver, Colorado, United States was owned by the Vincentian order until it closed in 1995 due to falling enrollment. [1] Set on a 40-acre (16 ha) campus, the buildings were generally grouped around a quadrangle, the first of which was built in 1908
The Link–Lee House is named for John Wiley Link and Thomas Peter Lee, its first owners. The house is located at the corner of Montrose Boulevard and West Alabama Street, now on the University of St. Thomas campus in Houston. A monumental portico fronts the neoclassical building, which is clad in brick with terra cotta ornamentation. [3]
St. Stanislaus Seminary (Florissant) - Operated from 1831 to 1971; run by the Society of Jesus. St. Thomas Aquinas Preparatory Seminary - Operated from 1957 to 2002; run by the Diocese of Jefferson City. St. Vincent's Seminary (Missouri) - Operated until 1979.
[3] The Basilian Fathers had previously started several other secondary schools, as well as institutions of higher learning, throughout Texas in the early 20th century, including St. Thomas High School, also located in Houston. [4] The first classes at UST began on September 22, 1947, with 57 freshmen and 8 faculty members. [5]
St. Charles Seminary; St. John's Provincial Seminary; St. Joseph College Seminary (Illinois) St. Joseph's College (Santa Clara County, California) Saint Joseph's Seminary (Plainsboro, New Jersey) St. Joseph's Seminary (Washington, D.C.) St. Paul's College, Washington, D.C. St. Thomas Seminary (Denver) St. Vincent's Seminary (Missouri) SS. Cyril ...
St. Mary's Seminary and University: Baltimore, Maryland: Phillip J. Brown (President-Rector) 1791: Roman Catholic St. Peter's Seminary: London, Ontario: Denis Grecco (Rector) 1986: Roman Catholic St. Stephen's College: Edmonton, Alberta: Kae Neufeld (Acting Principal and Dean) 1908: United Church of Canada St. Tikhon's Orthodox Theological Seminary
St. Thomas Seminary was founded in 1897 by Bishop Michael Tierney, the sixth Bishop of Hartford. The original Seminary was located at 352 Collins Street in Hartford, in what was once the Chinese College. It opened its doors on September 7, 1897. [1] Bishop Tierney appointed the Right Reverend John Synnott as the first President of St. Thomas. [2]
It closely resembles Godefroy's earlier St. Mary's Seminary Chapel in Baltimore, another Sulpician church. St. Thomas is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Kentucky and considered "The Cradle of Catholicism in Kentucky." [2] St. Thomas Roman Catholic Church and Howard-Flaget House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. [1]