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Pages in category "Catholic schools in Jamaica" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The school was named after the Child Jesus, and was founded by the Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help of Jamaica (FMS) in Jamaica. [3] Holy Childhood High began as a private school in 1937 with 8 pupils (3 boys 5 girls the boys were later transferred to St. George's College) housed in a building near Holy Cross Rectory ...
St. Joseph's Teachers' College is a Roman Catholic teacher training college in Kingston, Jamaica. It was founded in 1897 by the Franciscan Sisters of Allegany, a religious order in the Roman Catholic Church in Jamaica. The college campus contains dormitories to accommodate students from more distant areas.
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Alpha Boys' School Radio [16] is the school's 24/7 online radio station. Featuring music performed by Alpha's alumni, including jazz stalwarts of the 1950s and 1960s like Joe Harriott and Dizzy Reece, ska pioneers the Skatalites, Cedric 'Im' Brooks and Rico Rodriguez; Vin Gordon; Leroy Smart and Leroy 'Horsemouth' Wallace; and Winston ...
May Pen High School (abbreviated M.P.H.S. or MPHS) is a privately – run Seventh-Day Adventist School in Jamaica with an estimated population of 400 students.The school is located at 18A Bryants Crescent, May Pen, Clarendon and has been there for over 30 years.
The number of Catholic followers in 1921 was estimated at 37,000 [11] (around 4% of the population at the time). In 1950, American prelate John J. McEleney was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Jamaica, later becoming Bishop of Kingston when the apostolic vicariate was elevated to the Diocese of Kingston in 1956. McEleney opened St. Michael's ...
By the time of 1964–1965, Catholic schools accounted for nearly 89% of all private school attendance and 12% of all school-age children in school (K-12) in the USA. The number of religious (priests, brothers, and sisters) was at its highest, allowing schools to offer qualified teachers at minimal costs, meaning that most children in the 1940s ...