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Fontbonne Hall is an all-girls, private, Roman Catholic high school in Brooklyn, New York, United States. Established in 1937 by the Sisters of St. Joseph , [ 2 ] it is located within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn .
Our Lady's Catholic Academy (South Ozone Park) - Includes the Rockaway Campus and the 128th Street Campus - Closed in 2020 [16] St. Camillus Catholic Academy ( Rockaway Park ) - From 2014 to 2019 enrollment declined by about 25%.
Elementary Schools and Academies [12]. Blessed Sacrament Catholic Academy; Brooklyn Jesuit Prep; Good Shepherd Catholic Academy; Holy Angels Catholic Academy (merging into Bay Ridge Catholic Academy, September 2020) [13]
Brooklyn College Academy: K555 Public Brooklyn Collegiate: A College Board School K493 Public Brooklyn Community High School of Communication, Arts and Media K412 Public Brooklyn Democracy Academy: K643 Public, transfer Brooklyn Emerging Leaders Academy Charter School (BELA) K892 Public charter
La Salle Hall at Clermont and Greene Avenues, the former residence of Bishop John Loughlin and Christian Brother faculty and staff members. In 1851, the De La Salle Christian Brothers assumed direction of the boys' section of what was then known as the St. James School on Jay Street in Brooklyn, the parochial school of St. James' Church.
Fontbonne Academy's Lilly Blow, right, prepares to intercept the pass from Miton's Grace Henry, left, during girls basketball action at Milton High School, Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023.
probably not comprehensive, but a good start AAIS Catholic A Central Catholic A North Catholic A South Catholic Bklyn/Queens Catholic New York Catholic B Catholic Nassau/Suffolk Catholic Staten Island Harvard Cup Monsignor Martin - Class A Monsignor Martin - Class AA Section 1 Conference 1A Section 1 Conference 1B Section 1 Conference 1C Section 1 Conference 1D Section 1 Conference 2A Section ...
Bishop Raymond A. Kearney High School was founded in 1961 as part of the Diocesan system of schools. It was dedicated by Most Rev. Brian Joseph McEntegart on November 2, 1961, and named in honor of the youngest auxiliary bishop of Brooklyn who had served the diocese from 1935 until his death on October 1, 1956.