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St. Mary of the Falls 25615 Bagley Rd, Olmstead Falls Founded in 1850, church dedicated in 1950 [86] St. Mary 340 Union St, Bedford: Founded as a mission in 1905, became a parish in 1921. Church dedicated in 1970 [87] St Mary 250 Kraft St, Berea Founded in 1852, church dedicated in 1870 [88] St. Matthias 1200 W Sprague Rd, Parma [89] St. Monica
The congregation was founded in 1881 as a mission of Ohio City, Cleveland's St. Mary's on-the-Flats to serve a growing German immigrant population on Cleveland's west side. The original church and school building were constructed in 1883 but burned on June 29, 1891, while the new building was under construction.
Cleveland Central Catholic was formed by the merger of 4 Roman Catholic Cleveland high schools - St. John Cantius, Lourdes Central, St. Michael the Archangel, and St. Stanislaus. [3] Its first year of operation was the 1969-1970 scholastic year.
St. Mary's on the Flats, originally known as the Church of Our Lady of the Lake, [1]: 34–35 [2]: 8 was the first Catholic church building in Cleveland, Ohio.The location where the church once stood can be found, in an 1881 atlas, [3] at the south-east corner of Columbus Ave. and then Girard Ave. on the east bank of the Cuyahoga river in the flats.
Lorain St. Mary's Fighting Irish; Lorain Catholic Spartans; Mentor Lake Catholic Cougars (1972-1977) Parma Byzantine Catholic Buccaneers (closed 1975) Warrensville Heights Tigers (1979-1983) Note: Our Lady of Lourdes, St. John Cantius and St. Stanislaus High Schools merged with Cleveland St. Michael in 1968 to form Cleveland Central Catholic.
Michael D. Polensek (born November 16, 1949) is a City Council member in Cleveland, Ohio, representing Ward 8.He has served in Cleveland City Council since 1977. He lives in the North Shore Collinwood area of Cleveland with his wife, Kathy, and has five children: Lisa, Deana, Michael, Lauren and Andrew.
In May 2013, St. Vincent–St. Mary alumnus LeBron James donated $1 million to the school for the purpose of renovating their basketball arena. The project included the installation of a new basketball floor, scoreboard, locker rooms, and bleachers, and the seating capacity, which was raised from 1,600 to 1,831.
Central, also known as Cedar–Central, is a neighborhood on the East Side of Cleveland, Ohio.Situated on the outskirts of downtown, Central is bounded roughly by East 71st Street on its east and Interstate 90 on its west, with Euclid Avenue on its north and Interstate 77 and the Penn Central Railroad to the south. [2]