Nerinx Hall High School

Nerinx Hall High School
Address
530 East Lockwood Avenue
Webster Groves, St. Louis County, Missouri 63119
United States
Coordinates 38°35′24″N 90°20′29″W / 38.5899°N 90.3414°W / 38.5899; -90.3414Coordinates: 38°35′24″N 90°20′29″W / 38.5899°N 90.3414°W / 38.5899; -90.3414
Information
Type Private, All-Girls
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1924
Founder Sisters of Loretto
President John Gabriel
Principal Jane Wynne Kosash
Faculty 57
Grades 912
Color(s) Green and White         
Team name Markers
Rival Ursuline Academy (St. Louis)
Accreditation http://www.independentschools.org/member-schools/show/nerinx-hall
Newspaper Hallways
Yearbook The Key
Athletic Director Nancy Milward
Website http://www.nerinxhs.org

Nerinx Hall High School is a private Roman Catholic girls high school in Webster Groves, Missouri, and is part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Louis.

History

Nerinx Hall began with three pioneer women, Mary Rhodes, Ann Havern and Christina Stuart, who founded the Sisters of Loretto in 1812. [1] The Nerinx Hall name is a tribute to Father Charles Nerinckx's work. As the country moved west, so did the Sisters of Loretto. From frontier Kentucky into the mid- and southwest United States, the Sisters continued their involvement in Catholic education. In 1924, Nerinx Hall began educating young women in the Lockwood family home in Webster Groves, Missouri, graduating its first class in May 1925.

Over the years the school has grown in enrollment and physical facilities. Nerinx added a gym in 1947 and moved into the current red brick building in 1954. In 1993, Nerinx Hall returned to Lockwood House where the school had been founded. This historic home now houses a classroom and the bookstore, as well as departmental and administrative offices. In 1996, a new physics lab, media center, three classrooms and an elevator were added. The chemistry lab was also updated, and the library was expanded and renovated. In 2002, Nerinx Hall realized plans to "go green", with a biology lab renovation that included a new greenhouse for plant experimentation. In 2007, the school completed its largest expansion since the construction of the current school building in 1954. The 375-seat Heagney Theatre and the Knaup Family Student Commons were added to the campus at this time. A two-story classroom addition also brought a new music classroom and art lab spaces. The athletic field was also expanded and an artificial turf surface was installed.

In 2012, Sr. Barbara Roche, SL announced her intention to retire after serving as the school's president for the past 26 years. The Board of Trustees named John Gabriel, principal of Ursuline Academy (New Orleans), as the school's first lay-president effective for the 2013-2014 school year.[2]

Purpose

Nerinx Hall is grounded in the belief that educated, empowered and caring young women are vital to today's world and the future. In the four years a girl spends at Nerinx there are three main priorities: a woman must know herself and her world, diversity enriches while trust empowers, and all people are called to action.[3]

Extracurriculars

Nerinx hosts a variety of extracurricular activities. Students are strongly encouraged to join clubs, teams, and participate in fine arts to enrich their interests and interact with peers and classmates. The 30 clubs focus on a variety of topics from academics to service to leadership. Nerinx, more commonly known in the athletic world as home of the Markers, offers thirteen sports for the young women to participate in: swimming, soccer, track & field, lacrosse, diving, softball, field hockey, volleyball, tennis, golf, cross country, basketball and racquetball. In the 2010-2011 school year the girls had many athletic achievements. The golf team received 7th place in state, the cross country ream took 2nd at sectionals, the tennis doubles team qualified for state, cross country brought home 5th place at state, and the JV racquetball team won 1st place in the state tournament.[4] In 2015 the cross country team took first in state.

Heagney Theater

The Heagney Theater was completed in the summer of 2007 and is the largest expansion project the school has seen since 1954.[5] This addition to the school has four classrooms, a new music room, and a brand new state of the art theater. The theater seats 371 people and has an orchestra pit, scene shop and dressing rooms. The addition also holds two art labs and the fine arts department office.

Notable alumnae

References

  1. "Loretto History | Loretto Community". www.lorettocommunity.org. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
  2. Bock, Jessica. "Head of Nerinx Hall High School to retire; new president named", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 7, 2012; retrieved January 4, 2013.
  3. "Data Set: Worldle of Nerinx Hall High School's Philopsophy". Retrieved March 30, 2011.
  4. "Nerinx Hall". Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  5. "Nerinx Hall & Heagney Theater". Retrieved March 30, 2011.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.