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1945 Newberry Electric Corporation, Phoenix, AZ [13] 1945 Neil B. McGinnis Equipment Company (Now The Vintage 45) Phoenix, AZ; 1945 St. Agnes Catholic Church, Phoenix, AZ [14] 1945 Sacred Heart Church School, Mesa, AZ [15] 1946 Phoenix Merchandise Mart, Phoenix, AZ; 1946 Encanto Village shopping center, Phoenix, AZ
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix consists of 94 parishes, 23 missions, 29 elementary schools, seven high schools, three universities, and one seminary, and is one of the fastest growing dioceses in the United States, with an increase of over 300,000 Catholics in the past 10-years alone.
Bourgade Catholic High School; Brophy College Preparatory; Holy Family Academy; New Gains Academy (Arizona's Best School) North Valley Christian Academy; Northwest Christian School; Paradise Valley Christian Preparatory; Phoenix Christian Junior/Senior High School; Phoenix Country Day School; St. Mary's High School; Scottsdale Christian Academy
The school fills the old St. Agnes school building at 1601 California Ave., a Catholic elementary school that closed in 1993. As a Jesuit school it already has established links with St. Xavier ...
St. Agnes Church: built NRHP-listed 203 Eighth St. ... Old St. Anastasia Catholic School: 1914 built 2000 NRHP-listed ... 712 N. School St. Honolulu: Modern Holy ...
Saint Mary's High School was the first Catholic high school in Arizona, and has been part of the Greater Phoenix Metropolitan area since 1917. [4] St. Mary's was founded by the Sisters of the Precious Blood. The founders set aside classroom space for four boys and ten girls at St. Anthony's Elementary school.
The school teaches pre-kindergarten through eighth grade and is staffed by the Sisters of Loreto. The school was founded in 1954 by Bishop Daniel J. Gerke of Tucson and Reverend Paul P. Smith. On August 20, 1954, four Sisters of Loreto from the Order of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary arrived from Navan, Ireland to staff the new school.
In 1998, the pastor of the parish of St. Thomas Aquinas lobbied the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix to buy land for a future elementary and high school.. The diocese tapped the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia, known colloquially as the "Nashville Dominicans," to establish a presence in Phoenix and operate the new high school.