Mount de Sales Academy (Catonsville, Maryland)

Mount de Sales Academy
Address
700 Academy Road
Catonsville, Maryland, (Baltimore County) 21228
United States
Coordinates 39°17′9″N 76°43′17″W / 39.28583°N 76.72139°W / 39.28583; -76.72139Coordinates: 39°17′9″N 76°43′17″W / 39.28583°N 76.72139°W / 39.28583; -76.72139
Information
Type Private
Religious affiliation(s) Christian
Denomination Roman Catholic
(Dominicans)
Patron saint(s) Saint Francis de Sales
Established 1852
Founder Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary
Sister school Mount Saint Joseph High School
Authority Archdiocese of Baltimore
NCES School ID 00578546[1]
Principal Sister Mary Thomas Huffman O.P.
Vice Principal of Academic Affairs Theresa Greene
Vice Principal of Student Affairs Rose Thompson
Staff 30
Faculty 51
Grades 912
Gender Girls
Enrollment 470 (2014)
  Grade 9 123
  Grade 10 125
  Grade 11 117
  Grade 12 121
Average class size 16
Student to teacher ratio 11:1
Hours in school day 6.5
Campus Suburban
Color(s) Blue and White         
Slogan "Be who you are and be that perfectly well" - St. Francis de Sales
Song "Hail to you, dear Mount de Sales"
Athletics conference IAAM
Mascot Sailor
Team name Sailors
Rival Seton Keough (Closing June 2017)
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools[2]
Average SAT scores 1776 (2014)
Average ACT scores 25.1 (2014)
Publication The View from the Cupola
Newspaper Anchor
Yearbook Ionic Columns
Tuition $13,600 (2015-2016)
Website

www.mountdesales.org

Mount de Sales Academy
Location 700 Academy Rd., Catonsville, Maryland
Area 10.3 acres (4.2 ha)
Built 1852
Architect Curley, James & Son; Baldwin,E.F.
Architectural style Classical Revival, Italianate
NRHP Reference # 86001187[3]
Added to NRHP May 30, 1986

Mount de Sales Academy is an all-girls secondary school located in Catonsville in unincorporated Baltimore County, Maryland. The school is located near the city of Baltimore. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore.

The school is affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and is partially staffed by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia.

Mount de Sales Academy was founded in 1852 by the Visitation Sisters as a boarding school for girls and boys, later teaching only girls it now serves as a college-preparatory school. It was the first institution in Baltimore County to offer education to women of all religious denominations.[4]

Reputation

Mount de Sales Academy was named one of the top 50 Catholic schools in the country by the Catholic High School Honor Roll since 2004 on the basis of academics, Catholic identity, and civic education . It is the only school in the state of Maryland to be included in the list.

Campus and Buildings

Mount de Sales is located on 12 acres (49,000 m2) of land, from which one can see the Inner Harbor and the Baltimore city skyline. The back yard of the school is home to a garden featuring a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The campus also includes athletic fields, a convent, and a gymnasium.

Most classes are still held in the original school building, begun in 1852 and expanded in the 1860s. The main building, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, retains architectural traces of the cloistered sisters of the Visitation Order who founded the school.[4] The chapel, located in the center of the main building, is the oldest place of worship still in use in Baltimore. The stained glass windows in the chapel, original to the building, were cast in the same place and manufacturing technique as the famous stained glass of the Cathedral of Chartres, France. Interestingly, the windows are located at the back of the building, as Catholics in the area were undergoing much persecution at the time of the building's planning, and its founders wished to avoid vandalism and protest. The building also includes the Music Hall, which has details such as trompe-l'œil painting, the Padre Pio library, which contains relics of that saint and a mosaic in his honor, computer labs, a spacious art studio, and the Ramona Carrigan Science Center.

The recently renovated Regina Keenan Knott Alumnae Hall was formerly an infirmary for the school's boarding students. At one time it was connected to the main building by a walkway which has since been demolished. the building's front is the opposite of the main building so that visitors would not see any of the sick or otherwise ailing girls.

The Constance and Samuel Pistorio Sports Complex was dedicated in 1999. Its design was modeled after the architecture of the campus' historic buildings. The facility is located across from the main building, on a piazza featuring gardens and a bronze statue of Saint Joseph the Worker.

The Board of Trustees launched a three phase capital campaign in June 2010.[5] The campaign is entitled, Anchored in Excellence; Charting our Future. The phases are highlighted below:

Phase I A. New Convent Estimated $2 million ($1.5 million construction and $500,000 maintenance endowment) B. Security Fencing, Lighting, and Surveillance Cameras Estimated $1 million C. Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) System for 1852 Building Estimated $1 million

Phase II Regulation Turf Athletic Field with built-in Hillside Stadium Seating Estimated $1.5 million

Phase III Performing Arts Building Estimated $9 million

Brother School

The nearby all-boys Mount Saint Joseph High School is the Brother School of Mount de Sales Academy. The two schools share their long history with each other. In the present day:

Notable alumnae

See also

References and notes

  1. "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for Mount De Sales Academy". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved Dec 4, 2016.
  2. MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools". Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  3. National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  4. 1 2 Peter E. Kurtze; John McGrain & Rev. Michael Roach (September 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Mount de Sales Academy" (PDF). Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved 2016-03-01.
  5. "Mount de Sales Academy". Retrieved 8 March 2011.
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