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Diocesan offices, Arlington, Virginia 2013 Basilica of St. Mary, Alexandria, Virginia (2019) The Diocese of Arlington (Latin: Dioecesis Arlingtonensis) is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church in Northern Virginia in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the Archdiocese of Baltimore. The Cathedral of St ...
Bishop Denis J. O'Connell High School (also known as DJO [4]) is a private, Catholic college preparatory school founded in 1957 in Arlington County, Virginia.It was established by the Diocese of Richmond, but it has been under the direction of the Diocese of Arlington since 1974.
College of New Rochelle (New Rochelle, New York) - founded in 1904 as New York state's first Catholic college for women; merged into Mercy University (Dobbs Ferry, New York) College of Saint Mary-of-the-Wasatch (Salt Lake City, Utah) College of Saint Teresa (Winona, Minnesota) College of Saint Thomas More (Fort Worth, Texas) Official site
This is a list of current and former Roman Catholic churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arlington. The diocese includes approximately 80 churches divided into seven deaneries across the 21 northernmost counties and independent cities within the Commonwealth of Virginia. [1] The cathedral church of the diocese is the Cathedral of St ...
The next year (1984–85), the school was open to freshmen through juniors, and 1985–86 saw the first senior class. The Diocese of Arlington purchased the school building, which was in a dilapidated condition, from George Mason University, which had owned it for about a decade.
Holy Apostles College and Seminary is a Catholic seminary in Cromwell, Connecticut. It was founded in 1956 on a 40-acre (160,000 m 2 ) property in Cromwell by Eusebe M. Menard to provide a program of education and formation for men intending to enter the priesthood .
Pages in category "Roman Catholic Diocese of Arlington" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Howard's top priority as rector was curriculum reform. Quigley was still using the five-year minor seminary curriculum with the "Sulpician language-school model" that was started by Purcell 50 years earlier. However, it was inadequate for current seminarians, who needed two years of high school along with the first two years of college.