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Mercy Career & Technical High School is a private, Roman Catholic high school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is located within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia. It is the only four-year co-educational Catholic vocational high school in the United States. [3] [citation needed]
Community College of Philadelphia; Delaware Valley Academy of Medical and Dental Assistants (closed) Esperanza College of Eastern University; Hussian School of Art (closed) Lincoln Technical Institute, Center City and Northeast Philadelphia; Orleans Technical College; Pennsylvania Institute of Technology, Center City and Media; Star Technical ...
Associate's Colleges: High Career & Technical-High Traditional 193 1970 New Castle School of Trades: Union township: Lawrence: private for profit Associate's Colleges: High Career & Technical-High Traditional 606 1945 Orleans Technical College: Philadelphia: Philadelphia: private for profit unclassified unknown 1974 Pennco Tech: Bristol ...
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The Edward W. Bok Technical High School was a public high school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, designed by Irwin T. Catharine and named after literary figure Edward William Bok, editor of the Ladies' Home Journal. It was completed in February 1938 by the Public Works Administration (WPA) as a vocational high school
Mercy Career & Technical High School, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Monte Sant'Angelo Mercy College, North Sydney, New South Wales, Australia; Mount Lilydale Mercy College, Lilydale, Victoria; Mount Mercy University, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Mount Mercy College, Cork, Ireland; University of Detroit Mercy, a private, Roman Catholic co-educational ...
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The namesake, Murrell H. Dobbins (1843-1917), was a New Jersey-born man who became a member of the Philadelphia school board. [4] At one point the school had two campuses and was known as the Dobbins/Randolph Area Vocational Technical School. [5] It had absorbed the Randolph Skills Center, [6] named after Asa Philip Randolph. [7]