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St. Joseph's Academy (Baton Rouge) St. Louis Catholic High School; St. Mary's High School (Natchitoches, Louisiana) St. Michael the Archangel High School (East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana) St. Paul's School (Louisiana) St. Scholastica Academy (Covington, Louisiana) Saint Thomas Aquinas Regional Catholic High School
This is a list of high schools in the state of Louisiana. Acadia Parish ... (Abramson Sci Academy, Collegiate Baton Rouge, G. W. Carver ... Central Catholic High School;
Central High School is a public high school in Central, Louisiana, United States, in the Baton Rouge metropolitan area. It is the only high school in the Central Community School System . The Central school system serves the entire city of Central, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] as well as a section of the Brownfields census-designated place and another small ...
West Baton Rouge Parish Holy Family School (Port Allen) - It opened on September 5, 1949, with 146 students in Kindergarten through grade 3, with it becoming K-5 in 1950, and with one grade level per subsequent year until it was K-8, with 345 students, in 1953.
CENTRAL CATHOLIC CRUSADERS. HEAD COACH: Jeff Lindesmith, 11th year, 70-48. LAST YEAR: 7-5. POSTSEASON: Division V, Region 17. Central Catholic football’s returning lettermen (19)
[citation needed] Businessperson Russell Starns stated that the incorporation of Central, which took place in 2005, was a byproduct of the area's desire to establish a school system separate from East Baton Rouge Parish's; the Louisiana State Legislature allowed Central to operate a separate school system only after the city incorporated ...
Catholic High School was founded in 1894 as St. Vincent's Academy. The school was so named in recognition of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, who helped organize and establish the school. [4] The original site of the school was an old frame building in downtown Baton Rouge, and the enrollment was 106 students.
The present-day Roman Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge began with the work of French missionaries among the Native American peoples of the area. [2] The Jesuit priest Pierre Charlevoix celebrated the first mass in the Baton Rouge area in 1722. The first Catholic churches in the region were: St. Francis Chapel in Pointe Coupée in 1738 [3]