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Seeking to raise the profile of the ice hockey program, the administration at Sacred Heart University decided to build its first on-campus facility for ice hockey and figure skating. [2] The school eventually agreed to spend $70 million to build the Martire Family Arena at their West Campus location in Fairfield, Connecticut. The project was ...
An old alignment of the Berlin Turnpike, splits to the west, while US 5/Route 15 curve to their interchange with the Route 9 freeway and Route 372, in which all access besides the ramps from US 5/Route 15 to southbound Route 9 and from southbound Route 9 to US 5/Route 15 is made via Route 372. North of Route 9, the old alignment of the Berlin ...
Sacred Heart University was founded in 1963 by Walter W. Curtis, Bishop of the Diocese of Bridgeport on the grounds of the former Notre Dame Catholic High School. [ 3 ] [ 8 ] The university is led and staffed by the laity independent and locally oriented. [ 3 ]
The William H. Pitt Health and Recreation Center is a 2,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Fairfield, Connecticut on the campus of Sacred Heart University. It was opened in August 1997 and is home to Sacred Heart University men's and women's basketball, men's and women's volleyball, men's wrestling and fencing.
The part of campus which formerly housed Griffin High School is now known as the West Campus. The part of campus which was home to Sacred Heart Academy is known as the East Campus. Both facilities are used by SHG, with most of the school's athletic facilities being located on the West Campus and the majority of the academic facilities being ...
Campus Field is a 3,334-seat multi-purpose stadium in Fairfield, Connecticut. [2] It is home to the Sacred Heart University Pioneers football, lacrosse, and track and field teams. The facility opened in 1993. [3] The field and track located at Campus Field were modernized and renovated in the summer of 2008. The field was returfed in 2009 and 2014.
The school was originally founded by Mother Mary Keating on August 16, 1887, as the first School of the Sacred Heart west of the Rockies. The first year enrolled 30 young women operating in two rented Victorians at the corner of Bush and Octavia. In 1888, they purchased a larger building at Franklin and Ellis for $10 in gold coin.
It quickly outgrew its first location and in 1910, it was moved (as well as expanded) to its current location on Spokane's South Hill. The present Sacred Heart Medical Center's nine-story patient tower was built in 1971. [6] By 1984 the new East addition housed psychiatric, outpatient, radiology, and pediatric surgery services.