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La Crosse USD 395 is a public unified school district headquartered in La Crosse, Kansas, United States. [1] The district includes the communities of Alexander , La Crosse, Liebenthal , McCracken , Rush Center , Hargrave , Nekoma , and nearby rural areas. [ 2 ]
La Crosse is a city in and the county seat of Rush County, Kansas, United States. [1] As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 1,266. [ 3 ] La Crosse proclaims itself the "Barbed Wire capital of the world.
The nuns then abandoned teaching and a new 'Saint-Joseph school' was officially inaugurated on 3 October 1904 at '18-50 Rue de l'Abbaye ' with civilian teachers in a large building ceded by Archbishop Marie-Alphonse Sonnois (1893-1913) transferred from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint-Dié.
The Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman is the mother church of the Diocese of La Crosse. The cathedral, designed by architect Edward J. Schulte, was completed in 1962. [1] Built of limestone, it has a tall clock tower which rises above the surrounding buildings in downtown La Crosse, Wisconsin. [2]
257 Things You Should Know About the Diocese of La Crosse: A Celebration of the Diocese of La Crosse: 125 Years - 1968-1993: Bishop John J. Paul 50th Anniversary of Priestly Ordination: 1943-1993, 1993. Fisher, Gerald Edward. Dusk Is My Dawn: The First Hundred Years of the Diocese of La Crosse, 1969. Ludwig, M. Mileta.
The St. Joseph's Church and Parochial School in Hays, Kansas is a historic church and school at 210 W. 13th and 217 W. 13th. They were added to the National Register in 2008. [1] Listed are the St. Joseph's Church and the St. Joseph's Parochial School across the street, but not another school building. The church is a two-and-a-half-story built ...
St. Joseph was founded after 1874 by its first Catholic pastor, Father Louis-Marie Mollier. [2] Its inhabitants were originally predominantly Roman Catholics of French American heritage. [3] St. Joseph had a post office between 1878 and 1901. [4]
In 1884, the Rev. Joseph Perrier invited the Sisters of St. Joseph to come to Concordia to open a school in the Catholic Parish. Mother Stanislaus Leary, superior, and five sisters answered the invitation. They came to Concordia and established the Nazareth Motherhouse and Academy in a new building located next to the church.