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St. George Academy, also known as St. George's Ukrainian Catholic School (Ukrainian: Українська Католицька Школа Святого Юра), is an American private, Ukrainian-Catholic high school, located in the East Village neighborhood of the Manhattan borough of New York City.
St. George is a neighborhood on the northeastern tip of Staten Island in New York City, along the waterfront where the Kill Van Kull enters Upper New York Bay.It is the most densely developed neighborhood on Staten Island, and the location of the administrative center for the borough and for the coterminous Richmond County.
The schools of the Greece Central School District educate approximately 11,000 students. Excluding New York City, the Greece Central School District is the seventh largest school district in the State of New York. [33] The post-elementary schools have Classical Greek names and mascots.
Yúra pronounced [ʊkrɐˈjinʲsʲkɐ kɐtoˈlɪt͡sʲkɐ ˈt͡sɛrkʋɐ sʲʋʲɐˈtɔɦo ˈjurɐ]) is a Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church located in East Village, Manhattan, New York City, at 7th Street and Taras Shevchenko Place. [5] The church and the adjoining St. George Academy are encircled by, but not included in, the East Village ...
The school was first named Saint Vincent's School when it opened on Canal Street. It moved to Second Avenue in 1856 and changed its name to La Salle Academy in 1887. In 2010, the school relocated to 215 East 6th Street, sharing the building with St. George Academy .
Saint Demetrios Preparatory School is a private Greek Orthodox Christian school located in Astoria, Queens, New York City. It is the largest Greek-American and Greek Orthodox day school in the United States, as well as the only Greek Orthodox high school in the United States. [1] It enrolls students from preschool to twelfth grade.
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St. George's Church (c.1840), East 7th Street, between Hall Place and Second Ave—A Ukrainian Catholic in the East Village, it was later termed the Old Building by the new Ukrainian Catholic owners before being demolished in 1977: The AIA Guide to NYC described it as “A Greek Revival temple in stucco, with a mini-onion dome.”