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These included 110 primary schools and 55 secondary schools. The Catholic school population decreased over the decades due to the increase of charter schools, the rise in tuition at Catholic schools, the small number of African-American Catholics, the exodus of White Catholics to the suburbs, and the decreased number of teaching nuns. [95]
Outside of Detroit; All Saints Catholic School - It is the parish school of these churches: Resurrection, St. John Neumann, Saint Kenneth, and St. Thomas à Becket. The school opened in 1997 and was named after a previous Catholic school in Detroit. It was the archdiocese's first new Catholic school in the post-1964 period. [57]
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places [34] and as a Michigan Historic Site [30] Cathedral of St. Anthony 1901 5247 Sheridan St, Detroit Romanesque Revival Donaldson and Meier Listed as a Michigan Historic Site. [30] [180] Now part of the Ecumenical Catholic Church of Christ [181] St. Benedict Church 1915 16299 John R St., Highland Park
St. John's was founded in 1949 for the province of the Archdiocese of Detroit. [1] The Sulpicians administered and staffed the seminary until their withdrawal in 1971. The first rector was Fr. Lyman A. Fenn. [2] Its chapel — with around fifty colored stained glass windows designed, crafted and installed by Detroit Stained Glass Works — was dedicated on May 12, 1955.
Sacred Heart Major Seminary is a private Roman Catholic seminary in Detroit, Michigan. It is affiliated with the Archdiocese of Detroit . In 2016–2017, 107 seminarians, representing eleven dioceses and two religious orders were enrolled in classes, [ 1 ] along with 426 lay students (full and part-time). [ 2 ]
De La Salle Collegiate High School is an all-boys Catholic high school run by the De La Salle Christian Brothers. Founded in 1926, the school was located on the east side of Detroit before moving to its current location in Warren, Michigan , in 1982.
SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary was a four-year private Polish seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan, United States. The seminary, taking its name from Saints Cyril and Methodius, was founded in 1885 in Detroit, Michigan, to prepare candidates for the Roman Catholic priesthood primarily to serve Polish American immigrant communities. It closed in ...
Side elevation of church. When German immigrants first came to Detroit in 1830, they arrived in the middle of a cholera epidemic. [3] Avoiding the city, they traveled north along Gratiot, settling among a handful of French Roman Catholics families that were descendants of the earliest trappers and pioneers. [2]