Ads
related to: private high schools in virginia beach
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Catholic High School (formerly known as Norfolk Catholic High School (1949–1993), Catholic High School (1993–2004), and Bishop Sullivan Catholic High School (2004–2019); commonly referred to as "Catholic" or "CHS") is a private Roman Catholic high school in Virginia Beach, Virginia, founded as Norfolk Catholic High School in 1949 and moved to Virginia Beach in 1993. [2]
124 Virginia Beach City. 125 Warren County. Toggle Warren County subsection ... Honaker high school Castle wood high school Richlands high school Abington high school ...
Cape Henry Collegiate is the oldest accredited private, college-preparatory, co-educational, independent day school in Virginia Beach, Virginia.Cape Henry sits on a 30-acre campus in a residential area within five miles of the Atlantic Ocean.
Pages in category "Private high schools in Virginia" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. ... St. Margaret's School (Virginia) Shenandoah ...
Princess Anne High School (PAHS) is one of 11 high schools in the Virginia Beach City Public School System. The school features, as its academy, the International Baccalaureate Programme . Opened in 1954, it is the oldest remaining high school in Virginia Beach, Virginia , United States.
A notable feature of Ocean Lakes high school is the Math and Science Academy, started in 1996 as the first of several magnet programs in Virginia Beach. Students throughout Virginia Beach who are interested in a math and science education can apply for admission to the academy.
Princess Anne High School alumni (10 P) Pages in category "High schools in Virginia Beach, Virginia" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Frank W. Cox High School is a secondary school located in the Great Neck subdivision of Virginia Beach, Virginia.It was founded in 1961 as the Northeast Junior High School, but upon opening, it was named after a former superintendent of Virginia Beach City Public Schools, Frank Woodard Cox, who led the school division from 1933 to 1968.