Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 1999, the Dioceses High School Task Force found room for expansion in the Gainesville area, and so St. Francis Catholic High School opened on August 16, 2004, to serve the growing population. In 2016, St. Francis dropped the "high school" moniker and changed its name to Saint Francis Catholic Academy. [2]
Saint Andrew School (Fort Worth) St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School ; St. George School (Fort Worth) St. John the Apostle School (North Richland Hills) St. Joseph School ; St. Maria Goretti (Arlington) St. Martin de Porres School ; St. Mary School (Gainesville) St. Peter the Apostle School (Fort Worth) St. Rita School (Fort Worth)
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Cardinal Gibbons High School (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) Cardinal Mooney High School (Florida) Cardinal Newman High School (West Palm Beach, Florida) Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart; Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School; Christopher Columbus High School (Miami-Dade County, Florida) Clearwater Central Catholic High School
St. Francis High School (Sacramento, California), an all-female college preparatory school; Saint Francis Central Coast Catholic High School, Watsonville, California; St. Francis High School (Gainesville, Florida), renamed St. Francis Catholic Academy in 2016; St. Francis Schools (Atlanta area, Georgia), grades K-12 in Alpharetta, Georgia
Elementary (primary) schools (related article) Pages in category "High schools in Alachua County, Florida" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
Articles about Catholic grade schools in Florida. Since the vast majority of Catholic schools in Florida are kindergarten through 8th grade , these schools are the equivalent of both " primary schools " and " middle schools " used in some modernized school systems.
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary (Pompano Beach) [45] - The church attempted to resolve its debt to the archdiocese by loaning $2.13 million from Bank of America, and the school had $337,000 in debt in 2009, and it ballooned to $1.3 million of debt in the 2009–2010 school year. It closed on June 15, 2010.