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Saint Peter the Apostle Church sponsored parochial schools from its early history. The Sisters of Charity of Convent Station were invited to staff the schools in 1867. In 1892, St. Peter's opened a new building, Columbia Hall, which would house the elementary school until 1960 and the high school until 1970.
St Peter the Apostle High School is one of two Roman Catholic secondary schools in West Dunbartonshire. St Peter the Apostle High School is a Roman Catholic comprehensive school serving the northern part of Clydebank, the village of Duntocher, Faifley, Hardgate and the Drumchapel area of Glasgow.
Saint Peter the Apostle Church is a historic Roman Catholic church at 94 Somerset Street in New Brunswick, Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States.. Originally, St. Peter's, the first Catholic church in New Brunswick was on Bayard Street consisted mostly of Irish Catholics, and was set up in 1829.
St. Peter the Apostle - closed 2019 - in the Third Ward; before its closure was a PreK-8 school; peak enrollment was about 600 students in the 1960s [43] Prior to 2009 St. Peter was a middle school with grades 6–8; that year St. Philip Neri School merged into St. Peter, making it PK-8. [44] From 2014 to 2019 enrollment declined by 70%. [29]
St Andrew's High School was a Catholic high school situated in Whitecrook in Clydebank in Scotland. [1] It was closed in 2009 and amalgamated with St Columba's High School to form St Peter the Apostle High School on the site of St Columba's in Drumry. The final head teacher was Mick Vassie (in post from 1995) who then took over as head of the ...
High schools. St. Pius X High School, Piscataway [4] (closed 1990 [citation needed]) St. Peter the Apostle High School, New Brunswick [4] (closed 2007 [citation needed]) Cardinal McCarrick High School (later Cardinal McCarrick/St Mary High School), South Amboy (merged into Raritan Bay Catholic in 2013, [4] closed 2015 [6]) K-8 schools
St. Paul the Apostle School; St. Philip the Apostle School [37] St. Raymond School [citation needed] St. Rose of Lima School - In 1962 the school desegregated, which resulted in anti-integration protests. In 1978 the congregation ended the school. [37] St. Simon Peter School; Plaquemines Parish
Holy Family School (Fort Worth) Holy Trinity School ; Immaculate Conception School ; Our Lady of Victory School (Fort Worth) Saint Andrew School (Fort Worth) St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School ; St. George School (Fort Worth) St. John the Apostle School (North Richland Hills) St. Joseph School ; St. Maria Goretti (Arlington)