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Academy of Our Lady, also known as Longwood Academy, was a school in the Chicago, Illinois from 1875 to 1999. It was co-ed until 1892, and a girls' school afterwards; took boarding students until 1935; and had a grade school program until 1950, after which it was only a high school. [ 1 ]
Academy of Our Lady of Guam — a high school in Hagåtña on the U.S. island of Guam and established in 1949; Academy of Our Lady (Chicago) — a former grade school and high school in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, also known as Longwood Academy, founded in 1875, and closed in 1999, the location later used for a campus of Chicago ...
Academy of Our Lady (Longwood Academy) (girls) [15] Closed in 2001: Madonna High School [15] St. Barbara High School [15] Closed in 2002: Lourdes High School (girls) (students accepted at De La Salle Institute West Campus) [15] Closed in 2003: Good Counsel High School (girls) [15] Closed in 2007: Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary North ...
The Academy of Our Lady, known colloquially (and later officially) as "Longwood Academy", operated in the area from 1874 to 1999. [80] In the Chicago Public Schools system, Washington Heights contains Julian High School, Fort Dearborn School and the Kipling, Evers, Fernwood, Green, Wacker, Garvey and Mount Vernon Elementary Schools. [81]
Our Lady of Hope 9711 W Devon Ave, Des Plaines: Our Lady of Perpetual Help: 1775 Grove St, Glenview: Our Lady of Ransom 8300 N Greenwood Ave, Niles: St. Catherine Laboure 3535 Thornwood Ave, Glenview St. Isaac Jogues 8149 W Golf Rd, Niles St. John Brebeuf: 8307 N Harlem Ave, Niles St. Martha: 8523 Georgiana Ave, Morton Grove
The Academy of Our Lady was established in August 2007, created from a merger of Archbishop Blenk High School and Immaculata High School.Archbishop Blenk opened in 1962 and Immaculata High School opened in 1956 as part of Immaculate Conception Parish and was served by the school Sisters of Notre Dame until 1979.
The Sisters of St. Joseph and the Diocese of Springfield co-founded Elms College as a preparatory academy for women in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, the Academy of Our Lady of the Elms, in 1897. [2] In 1899, Rev. John McCoy and Bishop Thomas Beaven of the Springfield diocese purchased property in Chicopee and it became St. Joseph's Normal College.
The university was originally established as the Convent of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart in 1868 by six members of the Sisters of the Holy Names, a teaching order from Quebec, Canada. They were invited to Oakland by Father Michael King, pastor of Saint Mary's Church to establish a school for girls and to provide means to train future teachers.