Saint John Neumann High School (Pennsylvania)

Saint John Neumann High School
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Information
Type Private, All-Male
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1934
Closed 2004
Grades 9-12

Saint John Neumann High School was an all-male Roman Catholic high school located in the South Philadelphia area of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. In 2004 the school, which was a part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, merged with Saint Maria Goretti High School to form Saints John Neumann and Maria Goretti Catholic High School.[1]

Contents

History

Southeast Catholic High School opened at the intersection of Seventh Street and Christian Street in 1934. The school became Bishop Neumann High School, after John Neumann, in 1955. In March of the following year the school moved to 2600 Moore Street, its last location. In August 1978 the school became St. John Neumann High School to reflect Neumann's canonization. In 1992 Neumann had 853 students. In October 1992 consultants told the archdiocese that Neumann and Goretti should be consolidated onto Neumann's site. By December of that year the archdiocese decided not to consolidate the two schools. In 2003 Neumann had 608 students. By then the combined populations of both schools declined by 29 percent in an 11 year span. In March 2003 the archdiocese asked the faculty and staff of Neumann to consider merging or closing the school as the school had increasing deficits and a decreasing student population. In June of that year the committees unanimously requested a merge. In September of that year Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, the head of the Philadelphia Archdiocese, decided that the merge should occur.[1]

The former Neumann campus became the St. John Neumann Place, a housing development for senior citizens.[2]

Alma mater

The alma mater was:[3] Glorious things of thee are spoken,
Hail to thee, oh great Neumann High
Our hearts are always with you,
you're the finest guiding light.
You are with us always with us
in all things we do for God.
Saint John Neumann, Saint John Neumann,
strength and honor in your name.
Saint John Neumann, Saint John Neumann,
strength and honor in your name.
In your life great strides you made.
Through your work among the poor.
So to you our Patron saint.
Praise be yours forever more.
We are strengthened by your piety.
Guide us as we pray to thee.
Saint John Neumann, Saint John Neumann,
strength and honor in your name.
Saint John Neumann, Saint John Neumann,
strength and honor in your name.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Woodall, Martha. "Neumann graduates its last all-male class." Philadelphia Inquirer. Saturday June 5, 2004. B02.
  2. ^ "ARCHDIOCESE AWARDED TAX CREDITS FOR ST. JOHN NEUMANN PLACE DEVELOPMENT TO MOVE FORWARD." Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia. March 10, 2006.
  3. ^ "Alma Mater." Saint John Neumann High School. April 11, 2003.

External links