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Our Lady of Nazareth Academy: Wakefield: Sisters of Charity of Nazareth: 1947 2009 Sacred Heart High School East Boston: St. Anne's School Arlington: St. Augustine High School South Boston: St. Bernard High School Newton: St. Clare High School Roslindale: St. Columbkille High School Brighton: St. John the Evangelist High School: Cambridge: 1921 ...
Our Lady's Academy (formally Our Lady Comforter of the Afflicted School) (Pre-K through 8) [85] Saint Jude School (Pre-K through 8) closed in 2019 [ 86 ] Government
9.1.12 Waltham. 9.2 Northern ... Our Lady of Nazareth Academy; Wakefield Memorial High School; Waltham ... Boston Community Leadership Academy; Boston Latin Academy ...
Our Lady of Fatima 50 Walsh Ave, Peabody: Founded as a mission for Portuguese immigrants in 1965. Current church dedicated in 1975 [98] Our Lady of Hope and St. Paul Parishes St. Paul Church, 50 Union St, Hamilton: Church dedicated in 1908, St. Paul parish founded in 1922. Now Our Lady Parish. [99] Our Lady Star of the Sea 85 Atlantic Ave ...
This independent school opened its doors on September 9, 2009. [2] In February 2009, after the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth announced the decision to close Our Lady of Nazareth Academy in Wakefield, Massachusetts, a group of parents, alumnae, and community business leaders started an organizing effort for a new girls' school, independent of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth, [3] with ...
Our Lady of Nazareth Academy was a private, all-girls, Roman Catholic high school in Wakefield, Massachusetts. It was located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston and operated from 1947 to 2009.
St. Mary's is located on School Street west of Lexington Street, one block north of Waltham's Central Square, and its property extends around the district court just to its east, and north to Pond Street. The oldest building in the complex is the Romanesque Revival brick church, whose construction began in 1858 and was not completed until 1872.
The first Mass in Newton Upper Falls was celebrated by Fr. James Strain of Waltham in the home of James Cahill in Chestnut Street in the year 1841. Prior to this, it seems that Mass was celebrated for a railroad gang in Newton Lower Falls by Fr. Thomas O'Flaherty as early as 1832. [1]