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The Milwaukee Catholic Conference is a former high school athletic conference in Wisconsin, United States.Consisting entirely of Catholic high schools within the Milwaukee archdiocese, the conference existed from 1930 to 1974 and all of its member schools were part of the Wisconsin Catholic Interscholastic Athletic Association and its successor, the Wisconsin Independent Schools Athletic ...
Burlington Catholic Central High School, ... St. Joan Antida High School, Milwaukee; St. Joseph Catholic Academy, ... Consolidated Catholic Schools, K-8, Lomira ...
Henry Aaron Field is a baseball stadium located in Lincoln Park, a park in the Milwaukee County Park system, in Glendale, Wisconsin. It is the current home to the Rufus King High School Generals and the Milwaukee Beavers baseball club (Land O' Lakes League). It is named after former Milwaukee and Atlanta Brave and Milwaukee Brewer Hank Aaron.
Notre Dame High School, Milwaukee; Pio Nono High School, St. Francis; Sacred Heart High School, Milwaukee; St. Benedict the Moor High School, Milwaukee; St. Benedict the Moor High School was established in 1935 by Fr. Philip Steffes, OFM Cap, the pastor of St. Benedict the Moor Parish, a mostly African American community. [2] It served both ...
Milwaukee Red Sox – Wisconsin State League (1931–1932, 1936) Milwaukee Chicks – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (1944) Location: North 7th Street (first base, east); North 8th Street (third base, west); Chambers Street (home plate, south); Burleigh Street (north, center field) Currently: I-43 Milwaukee County Stadium Home of:
Catholic Central High School in Burlington, Wisconsin, United States, is a private, Catholic, co-educational high school in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. Founded in 1920, [2] it offers both college-prep and general studies for grades 9 through 12. [3]
St. Lawrence Seminary High School is a preparatory high school operated by the Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order at Mount Calvary, Wisconsin. The school is in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. It is an all-male boarding school, with approximately 225 students enrolled in grades 9 through 12.
Pius XI High School, named in honor of Pope Pius XI, was founded in 1929. Originally it offered only the first three years of high school. [3] Thus, the first graduation occurred in 1937, when the first senior class was added to the school. Enrollment grew from a class of eight in 1937 to over 2,000 students throughout the 1960s and 1970s.