Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bishop Denis J. O'Connell High School (also known as DJO [4]) is a private, Catholic college preparatory school founded in 1957 in Arlington County, Virginia. It was established by the Diocese of Richmond , but it has been under the direction of the Diocese of Arlington since 1974.
David O'Connell was born on April 21, 1955, in Philadelphia, one of the four sons of Arthur J. and June O'Connell.He was raised in nearby Langhorne, Pennsylvania.Feeling drawn at an early age to the Catholic priesthood, he attended St. Joseph Preparatory High School in Princeton, New Jersey.
On May 9, 2001, Bishop Paul Loverde of the Diocese of Arlington led a group of civic and school officials at the groundbreaking for a $6.5 million student activity center. It included a gathering space for the entire student body, three classrooms, a gymnasium, locker rooms, a weight room, a movable stage used for athletic and stage equipment ...
Anthony O'Connell (1938–2012), a confessed child molester who served as a cleric, and the first Bishop of Knoxville, Tennessee; Bishop Denis J. O'Connell (1849–1927), bishop of the diocese of Richmond, Virginia
O'Connell High School may refer to: Bishop Denis J. O'Connell High School — Arlington County, Virginia; John A. O'Connell High School of Technology — San Francisco, California; Walter G. O'Connell Copiague High School — Copiague, New York; O'Connell College Preparatory School — Galveston, Texas
Archbishop Fiorenza approved the plan and on July 1, 2004 the school was reopened as O’Connell Consolidated High School. In the spring of 2007, the school's board of trustees decided to rename the school O'Connell College Preparatory School, to help distinguish it from other local public and private schools of secondary education. [2]
Bishop O’Connell was born in County Cork, Ireland, on 16 July 1953, according to The New York Times. He was made an auxiliary bishop in 2015, according to the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.
On January 19, 1912, O'Connell was appointed as the seventh bishop of the Diocese of Richmond by Pius X. [7] O'Connell's resignation for health reasons as bishop of the Diocese of Richmond was accepted by the pope on January 15, 1926; he was named the titular bishop of Mariamme. [8] [4] Denis O'Connell died on January 1, 1927, in Richmond at ...