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St. Agatha High School was a coeducational Catholic high school in Redford, Michigan. It closed and became St. Katharine Drexel High School in 2003. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Saint Martin de Porres High School (Detroit) St. Mary of Redford High School; St. Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Church (Jackson, Michigan) Salesian High School (Detroit) Servite High School (Detroit) St. Agatha High School (Michigan) St. Ambrose High School (Grosse Pointe, Michigan) St. Andrew High School (Detroit) St. Anne High School (Warren ...
Patronage of St. Joseph High School, Detroit (closed 1968) Rosary High School, Detroit (closed 1974) Sacred Heart High School, Dearborn (closed 1975) Sacred Heart Seminary High School, Detroit (closed 1957) St. Agatha High School, Redford (closed 2003) St. Agnes High School, Detroit (closed 1967) St. Alphonsus High School, Dearborn (closed 2003)
It was one of the designated schools of St. Agatha – St. James Church. [38] St. Michael School [114] St. Nicholas of Tolentine School – Merged into St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Regional School in 2012. [2] St. Paul School In the 1960s, it had 800 students. In 1999, it had 117 students. It closed in 1999. [89]
St. Francis High School (Boys), La Cañada Flintridge; Bishop Amat Memorial High School, La Puente; Damien High School (Boys), La Verne, (previously Pomona Catholic Girls High School) St. Joseph High School (Girls), Lakewood; Paraclete High School, Lancaster; St. Anthony High School, Long Beach; Cantwell-Sacred Heart of Mary High School, Montebello
The local Roman Catholic church is dedicated to Saint Agatha and was built c. 1860. [4] Glenflesk is in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kerry. [5] Glenflesk National School is a co-educational primary (national) school which had 34 pupils enrolled as of the 2020 school year. [6]
15th-century Romanesque church portal Statue of St Agatha in the underground chapel, putatively a former dungeon where Agatha miraculously survived her initial torture. The church was rebuilt after being razed, like most of the city, by the 1693 Sicily earthquake.
St. Agatha's Conservatory of Music and Arts or the Exchange Building, located on Exchange Street in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, was Minnesota's first fine arts school, established by Ellen Ireland, Eliza Ireland, (sisters of John Ireland) and Ellen Howard. [2] The 1908–1910 building was designed by John H. Wheeler. [3]