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On the 21st anniversary of the program incarnation of Family Rosary Crusade on television, long-time guest host Rev. Fr. Erick Santos, of the Archdiocese of Manila and parish priest of the Shrine of the Child Jesus in the poor district of Tondo in Manila joins the FRC program as its main host on March 14, 2010, replacing long-time host Bernard ...
St. Leonard’s School of the Holy Child, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (closed in 1983 - was 1-12 until 1970, then 9-12) Connelly School of the Holy Child, Potomac, Maryland (6-12) Cornelia Connelly High School, Anaheim, California (closed in 2020) Holy Child Academy, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania (K-8) Holy Child Academy, Old Westbury, New York (K-8)
The Society of the Holy Child Jesus is an international community of women religious that was founded in England in 1846 by Philadelphia-born Cornelia Connelly. Pages in category "Society of the Holy Child Jesus"
The Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN) is an American basic cable television network which presents around-the-clock Catholic programming. It is the largest Catholic television network in America, [1] and is purported to be "the world's largest religious media network", [2] (and according to the network itself) reaching 425 million people in 160 countries, [2] with 11 networks.
Cornelia Connelly, SHCJ (née Cornelia Peacock; January 15, 1809 – April 18, 1879) was an American-born educator who was the foundress of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, a Catholic religious institute. In 1846, she founded the first of many Holy Child schools, in England. Connelly has been proposed for sainthood in the Catholic Church.
New Evangelization Television, or NET-TV, is a Catholic television network based in Brooklyn, New York. The network is owned by DeSales Media Group, the communications arm of the Diocese of Brooklyn, which encompasses the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens in New York City .
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The school accepted boarders from around the world until the 1950s, when the dorms were converted into classrooms. Holy Child Academy was regarded as one of the most prestigious girls' private schools in the Philadelphia area, and when the enrollment reached several hundred students in the 1960s, a new and bigger school was built.