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Towson Catholic High School was a private Catholic, co-educational high school in the Baltimore suburb of Towson, Maryland, whose closing was announced in July 2009. At its peak enrollment in the 1960s and 1970s, more than 400 children attended. [ 2 ]
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St. Joseph High School: Emmitsburg: Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul 1890 1982 St. Joseph's Academy: Emmitsburg: Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul 1809 1902 St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys: Baltimore: Xaverian Brothers: 1866 1950 St. Stephen's High School: Baltimore: Sisters of St. Francis: 1931 1964 Towson Catholic ...
Towson High School is a high school in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States, founded in 1873.The school's current stone structure was built in 1949. Located in the northern Baltimore suburb of Towson and serving the surrounding communities of Towson, Lutherville, and Ruxton, it is part of the Baltimore County Public Schools system, the 25th largest school system in the nation as of 2005. [2]
Boys' Latin School of Maryland: non-sectarian: boys K-12 www.boyslatinmd.com: The Bryn Mawr School: non-sectarian girls PK-12 www.brynmawrschool.org: Calvert School: non-sectarian co-ed K-8 www.calvertschoolmd.org: The Catholic High School of Baltimore: Roman Catholic girls 9-12 thecatholichighschool.org: Friends School of Baltimore: Quaker: co ...
Albert Lewis Barthelme Sr. (October 10, 1919 – March 4, 2004 [1]) was an American basketball coach at the high school, college and professional levels. [2]Barthelme coached the Loyola College Greyhounds basketball team for the 1944–1945 season, playing for the team the following season. [2]
School No. 27 (Commodore John Rodgers Elementary School) Slate Ridge School; Southern High School (Baltimore, Maryland) Southside Academy; Southwestern Senior High School (Maryland) St. Euphemia's School and Sisters' House; Stanley Institute; Sturgis One Room School
The impetus for the creation of the BCL arrived in the off-season. The goal was to make a separate division from the Maryland Scholastic Association (MSA), which served as the league for all high school athletics in the Baltimore area, public or private. The BCL created a division that was strictly for Baltimore area Catholic High Schools.