St. Catherine's School (Richmond, Virginia)

For other schools of the same name, see St Catherine's School (disambiguation).
St. Catherine's School

Quæ Teneamus Perdimus,
Quæ Demus Nobis Sunt (Latin)
What we keep we lose,
only what we give remains our own.[1]
Address
6001 Grove Avenue
Richmond, Virginia, 23226
United States
Coordinates 37°34′16″N 77°31′17″W / 37.57111°N 77.52139°W / 37.57111; -77.52139Coordinates: 37°34′16″N 77°31′17″W / 37.57111°N 77.52139°W / 37.57111; -77.52139
Information
Type Private, Day, College-prep
Denomination Episcopal
Established 1890
Oversight Episcopal Diocese of Virginia
Head of School Terrie Hale Scheckelhoff, Ph.D.
Director of Upper School Lara Wulff
Director of Middle School Debbie Staley (interim)
Director of Lower School Annie Kapetanis
Grades K12
Gender Girls
Athletics conference Virginia Independent Schools Athletic Association
Nickname Saints
Rival The Collegiate School
Saint Gertrude
Brother school

St. Christopher's[2]

St. Catherine's School
Location 6001 Grove Ave., Richmond, Virginia
Area 14.9 acres (6.0 ha)
Built 1917
Architect Hobart Upjohn
Architectural style Colonial Revival
NRHP Reference # 07000400[3]
VLR # 127-5886
Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 04, 2007
Designated VLR March 7, 2007[4]
Website School website

St. Catherine's School is an independent Episcopal diocesan school for girls in grades junior kindergarten through 12th grade. It is the oldest private, all-girls school in Richmond, Virginia and the only independent all-girls school in Virginia for junior kindergarten - 12th grade. St. Catherine's is the sister school to St. Christopher's. The two schools boast a Coordinate Program which includes joint events for the Lower and Middle Schools and shared classes in the Upper School. St. Catherine's competes in 15 different sports as a member of the Virginia League of Independent Schools. The school holds a fund raising event on campus each spring called "Daisy Days." The event is open to the Richmond community. The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register in 2008.

History

The school was founded in 1890 by Virginia Randolph Ellett, known as Miss Jennie, during the middle of Richmond's New South movement.

In 1917 the school was incorporated and moved to its present site in the Westhampton area of Richmond. It was sold to the Episcopal Church in 1920 and renamed for St. Catherine, the patron saint of young women, especially those undergoing education. Virginia Randolph Ellett, who had relinquished her headship some years before, continued to teach and live at the school until her death on April 9, 1939 in her home built on campus. She was buried in Richmond's Hollywood Cemetery and her grave marker was created by sculptor Rene Decartes.

Student body

St. Catherine's is a college preparatory school with 961 girls currently enrolled (2014-2015) from junior-kindergarten through twelfth grade, with a tuition of approximately $23,000 for Upper School day students. For almost 90 years a boarding program existed at St. Catherine's but was phased out in 2008. The school's official colors are gold and white. A long-standing rivalry exists between St. Catherine's and The Collegiate School.

Ampersand

Ampersand, the joint theatre organization of St. Catherine's and St. Christopher's, organizes a variety of theatre-related activity, including three annual mainstage plays, which have ranged recently from one-acts to classic plays such as The Glass Menagerie, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Antigone, and The Importance of Being Earnest, to more contemporary full-length plays, such as Tom Dudzick's Over the Tavern and David Auburn's Proof, to musicals such as Alan Menken's Little Shop of Horrors and George S. Kaufman's Guys and Dolls. Plays have been held in McVey Theatre for more than 50 years.

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Mission and Core Values". st.catherines.org.
  2. "Our Brother School". st.catherines.org.
  3. Staff (2009-03-13). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  4. "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved 19 March 2013.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 06, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.