Chaminade College Preparatory School (Missouri)
Chaminade College Preparatory School | |
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Chaminade Hall is the main classroom building on the school's campus, and its oldest facility Esto Vir Be a Man | |
Address | |
425 South Lindbergh Boulevard Creve Coeur, Missouri, St. Louis County) 63131 United States | |
Coordinates | 38°38′59″N 90°24′25″W / 38.64972°N 90.40694°WCoordinates: 38°38′59″N 90°24′25″W / 38.64972°N 90.40694°W |
Information | |
Type | Private, All-Boys |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1910 |
Founder | Society of Mary (Marianists) |
President | Rev. Ralph Siefert, S.M. |
Principal | Philip Rone |
Chaplain | Fr. Oscar Vasquez, S.M. |
Grades | 6–12 |
Enrollment |
501 (high school) 277 (middle school) (2012) |
Average class size | 17 students |
Student to teacher ratio | 9:1 |
Campus size | 55 acres (220,000 m2) |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Cardinal and White |
Athletics conference | Metro Catholic Conference |
Team name | Red Devils (Unofficial) |
Accreditation |
Independent Schools Association of the Central States North Central Association of Colleges and Schools |
Average ACT scores | 27.6 |
Newspaper | Cardinal and White |
Yearbook | The Cardinal |
Tuition | $17,564 for day students; $33,091 for resident students (2012-13) |
Middle School Principal | Todd Guidry |
Admissions Director | Diane Dunning-Gill [1] |
Athletic Director | Tom Fernandez |
Website | chaminade-stl.org |
- For other schools with this name, please see Chaminade (disambiguation).
Chaminade College Preparatory School is an independent Roman Catholic school, of the Marianist Order, for boys in grades six through twelve in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Louis. The school is located in Creve Coeur, in west St. Louis County, Missouri. The school offers 7-day, 5-day, and temporary boarding. Students come from throughout the United States and from countries throughout the world. Canning Hall, the name of the dormitory, accommodates up to eighty residents. The school bears the name of Father William Joseph Chaminade, a priest who lived during the era of the French Revolution and who founded the religious order known as the Society of Mary (Marianists). The school maintains an active relationship with the Society of Mary through governance structures and the employment of lay and religious Marianists and maintaining this charism.
History
Chaminade was founded by the Society of Mary in 1910, less than one hundred years after the school's namesake, Blessed Father William Joseph Chaminade, had founded the order, and only sixty years after the Marianists had established themselves in the United States. Originally it was a boarding and day school, with most of its students residing in the open dormitories that were located on the third and fourth floors of the main building; the priests and brothers of the Society of Mary resided in rooms on the north and south ends of each floor.[2]
When the school opened in 1910, only one building, which later would be named "Chaminade Hall," existed on campus, besides the original farmhouse that existed when the land was purchased. In 1919, however, the school built a gymnasium north of the school building. The main building, the farmhouse, and the gymnasium, were for many years the only permanent structures on the campus until the 1950s, when the school built new dormitories for students, a new residence building for the members of the Marianist order, and a new chapel.[2]
These buildings were connected to the main building and the gymnasium by a network of underground tunnels that allowed the priests and brothers to move between buildings without going outside. In 1970, the school constructed a new athletic facility named the Athletictron, and the school added the "West Wing" onto the back of Chaminade Hall in 1981. In 2002, the West Wing was expanded again, adding middle school classrooms, a cafeteria, and a new library. In 2011, construction was completed on the new Skip Viragh Center for the Arts. Rev. Ralph A. Siefert has been President of Chaminade since 1987. He is the longest serving President in the school's history. The 1000 seat auditorium in the Skip Viragh Center for the Arts was named in his honor.[2]
Facilities
Chaminade Hall is the main administrative and classroom building. It houses offices for the president, principal, and assistant principals, as well as the admissions office, the advancement office, and the business office. Most high school classrooms are in Chaminade Hall as well, spread over four floors and the basement.[3]
The original gymnasium is Juergens Hall . It houses the middle school gym, football offices, trainor's room, one of Chaminade's exercise rooms and middle school locker rooms.[3]
Canning Hall is the student dormitory and can house up to 65 students. Residence hall prefects also live in Canning Hall.[3]
Frische Hall is a former residence for religious members of the Society of Mary. Chaminade converted the building for use as faculty offices, the campus ministry center, faculty lounge, the activity club rooms, and Chaminade's student center. There is also a courtyard (originally a cloister garden) where the Bar-B-Que team's smoker sits.[3]
The Immaculate Conception Chapel is the religious center of the campus. While the chapel is too small for the entire school to have mass together in it, it is still used for smaller masses and reconciliation services. The sacristy is inside Frische Hall.[3]
The Athletictron is the athletic center for the school. It houses a basketball/volleyball court, a commons area, a concessions stand, locker rooms for men, women and faculty, and a swimming pool. The pool is not only used by Chaminade students, but by other swim and dive teams in the area, such as St. Joseph's Academy and De Smet Jesuit.[3] Other athletic facilities on campus include eight tennis courts, a football stadium and track, a baseball diamond, a soccer stadium, and two multi-purpose practice fields, one of which has an all-weather turf field. The West Wing or New Wing has a cafeteria, an Atrium, a library and state of the art media center, 16 middle school classrooms, and weight lifting facilities.[3]
The Skip Viragh Center for the Arts, a state of the art performing and fine arts facility, opened in August 2011. This building houses a 1000-seat auditorium, four art classrooms, three music rehearsal rooms, several individual practice rooms, a smaller black box theatre, and an art gallery. This building was endowed by the family of Skip Viragh, a Chaminade alumnus, who graduated in 1959.[3]
Academics
Chaminade offers a demanding academic program for students with superior, above average or strong average ability. In recent years, Chaminade has expanded its college credit offerings to not only include 23 Advanced Placement courses but an additional 59 semester-long courses through Saint Louis University and the University of Missouri–St. Louis.[4]
Fine Arts/Activities
Over 150 students participate in the school band which has won numerous regional and national awards, including First Place in the 2010, 2011 and 2012 Midwest Festival of Music. In 2009, the Drama Club was selected to participate in the International Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland. Only a select number of schools throughout the United States are chosen for this honor. Chaminade offers over 25 clubs for its Middle School and High School students. One of the most popular clubs is the new online webstream program called CSPN (the Chaminade version of ESPN) in which sporting events and other activities are livestreamed on the web. Students participate as commentators, analysts, cameramen and the tech crew.
Community Service
Chaminade requires all students to participate in community service projects annually. Middle school students (grades 6–8) complete 10–20 hours annually while high school students complete 25–50 hours each year. Students help numerous groups throughout the St. Louis area. Recent Spring Break community service trips have been to "Coal Country" (West Virginia), as well as Mexico, Africa and Haiti.
The House System
Chaminade began The House System in 2003. Chaminade has five houses, and each student belongs to one of the five Houses: Gray, Lamourous, Mauclerc, Meyer and O'Donnell.
- Gray House is named after C. Vincent Gray, the first African American Marianist in the St. Louis Province of the Society of Mary.
- Lamourous House is named after Marie Therese de Lamourous. She and her family were close friends of Blessed Chaminade and provided shelter for him during his persecution at the time of the French Revolution. Marie Therese and her family were closely involved in the Blessed Chaminade's early Sodalities and his work to re-Christianize France after the revolution.
- Mauclerc House is named after Reverend Francis Xavier Mauclerc, S.M., who was the first Marianist to be ordained in the United States. Originally from France, Rev. Mauclerc joined the Marianists as a seminarian in 1850, and was ordained in 1852.
- Meyer House is named after Father Leo Meyer, S.M., who was the first Marianist in the United States. Father Meyer arrived from Switzerland in 1849, settling in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, where he founded St. Mary's Institute, which later became the University of Dayton.
- O'Donnell House is named after Brother John O'Donnell, S.M., a working brother for the Society of Mary. He died in 1973 at the age of 90.
Athletics
Chaminade offers over 60 teams in 17 different sports. Sports offered include baseball, basketball, bocce, bowling, cross country, football, golf, hockey, lacrosse, racquetball, soccer, swimming/diving, tennis, track/field, ultimate frisbee, volleyball, water polo and wrestling. Chaminade is part of the Metro Catholic Conference with Christian Brothers College High School, De Smet Jesuit High School, St. John Vianney High School (Kirkwood, Missouri), and St. Louis University High School.
Missouri State Championships
Chaminade teams have won 20 state championships competing in the Missouri State High School Activities Association.
- Baseball 1992, 1998
- Cross Country 2001
- Golf 1988, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2004
- Soccer 2001†, 2002, 2006
- Swimming/Diving 1974, 1984
- Tennis 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992
- Basketball 2009, 2016
- Volleyball 2009
†National Champions
Alumni
- Bradley Beal, guard for the Washington Wizards of the National Basketball Association.
- Ben Bishop, goalie for the Tampa Bay Lightning of National Hockey League
- Chris Butler, defenseman for the St. Louis Blues of the National Hockey League
- Brad Davis, midfielder for the Houston Dynamo of Major League Soccer
- John Doerr, billionaire venture capitalist
- Eugenio Garza Lagüera, Mexican billionaire businessman
- Neil Komadoski, Bradshaw Cup Champion
- David Lee, forward for the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association. Member of 2015 NBA champions, The Golden State Warriors. Drafted by New York Knicks. In Florida Gators Hall of Fame.
- Edward N. Peters, canonist and Referendary of the Apostolic Signatura
- Paul Stastny, center for the St. Louis Blues of National Hockey League
- Yan Stastny, center for the Thomas Sabo Ice Tigers of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga
- Bill Steltemeier, founding President of the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN).[5] He also served as the CEO of EWTN from 2000 to 2009.[5]
- Paul Virant, noted Chicago-area chef and restaurateur
- Joe Willis, goalie for D.C. United of Major League Soccer
- Jayson Tatum, Duke University Men's basketball player
- Tyler Cook, University of Iowa Men's basketball player
- Isaac Olson, University of Cincinnati baseball player
- Peter Zimmerman, Saint Louis University baseball player
References
- ↑ Chaminade: Admissions/Welcome, chaminade-stl.org; accessed July 22, 2014.
- 1 2 3 Chaminade: History
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Chaminade: About Us » Campus Tour
- ↑ Chaminade: Mission Statement, chaminade-stl.org; accessed July 22, 2014.
- 1 2 "Well-known deacon with Nashville ties dies at 83". The Tennessean. 2013-02-15. Retrieved 2013-02-24.