Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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)
Bishop Conaty-Our Lady of Loretto High School is a Catholic, archdiocesan, all-female high school located in the Byzantine-Latino Quarter of Los Angeles, California. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles. It is the First Catholic Archdiocesan all girls high school in the Los Angeles area.
The Archer School for Girls is an independent, college preparatory girls' school for grades 6–12, located in West Los Angeles, California, United States. Archer currently enrolls 490 students from 79 different zip codes and 141 feeder schools .
Immaculate Heart High School and Middle School is a private, Catholic, college preparatory day school for young women grades 6-12. The school is located in the Los Feliz neighborhood in Los Angeles, California, United States, at the intersection of Franklin Avenue and Western Avenue. There are approximately 200 students in the middle school ...
Diocesan School for Girls can refer to: Ireland. The Diocesan School for Girls, Dublin, merged with The High School, Dublin in 1974; New Zealand. Diocesan School for Girls (Auckland) Waikato Diocesan School, Hamilton; South Africa. Diocesan School for Girls, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape; St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls, Kloof, KwaZulu-Natal
Notre Dame Academy Girls High School is a private, all-girls Catholic high school located in West Los Angeles, California, United States. Part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles , it was founded in 1949 by the Sisters of Notre Dame .
Sacred Heart Academy was founded in 1907, one of the first girls' high schools founded in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.The Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose had already established an elementary school in 1890 when they were asked to open a high school.
The Vincentian Fathers were primarily responsible for staffing the school until 1973 when it was staffed by priests of the Los Angeles Archdiocese. Following closure, the western school campus became the home of Bishop Alemany High School, whose campus was severely damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake.