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Bishop Stang High School

Bishop Stang High School
Address
500 Slocum Road
North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, (Bristol County) 02747
United States
Coordinates 41°38′12″N 70°58′04″W / 41.636566°N 70.967860°W / 41.636566; -70.967860Coordinates: 41°38′12″N 70°58′04″W / 41.636566°N 70.967860°W / 41.636566; -70.967860
Information
Type Private coed. high school
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1959
President Mr. Peter Shaughnessy
Chaplain Fr. Richard Roy
Grades 912
Enrollment 656
Color(s) Maroon & Gray          
Athletics conference Eastern Athletic Conference
Team name Spartans
Rival Dartmouth, Bishop Feehan, Coyle-Cassidy
Accreditation New England Association of Schools and Colleges
Publication ETHOS (literary arts magazine)
Newspaper Spartan Script
Yearbook The Torch
Principal Peter Shaughnessy
Assistant Principal of Academics Kathleen Ruginis
Assistant Principal of Students Michael O'Brien
Athletic Director Ryan Sylvia
Website

Bishop Stang High School is a private Catholic high school located in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, in the New England region of the United States. It was the first diocesan secondary school in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River, which includes most of southeastern Massachusetts, including Cape Cod and the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. It is named after William Stang, the first bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, and has been coeducational since its founding.

It is located in the suburban town of Dartmouth, on the south coast of Massachusetts. Stang's 8-acre (32,000 m2) campus is 25 minutes west of Cape Cod and 20 minutes east of the Rhode Island border. Its 600-plus student body draws from more than 50 cities and towns in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

Catholic secondary education in southeastern Massachusetts began in the early 20th century with local parochial schools affiliated with various Catholic parishes. Some of these, such as the now-closed Holy Family High School, located near St. Lawrence Church in New Bedford, had strong academic reputations and produced generations of prominent Catholic alumni in the region. While Stang was not the first Catholic secondary school in southeastern Massachusetts, it was the first regional, diocesan, coeducational institution. Founded in 1959, Stang's original faculty included Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in full religious habit. The new 8-acre (32,000 m2) campus across from the Country Club of New Bedford in then-pastoral Dartmouth drew students from cities and towns in a 60-mile (97 km) radius from Rhode Island to Cape Cod. In the years following the Second Vatican Council, the number of Sisters of Notre Dame decreased. By the 1970s the vast majority of faculty and administrators were lay men and women, and the remaining sisters dressed conservatively, but in lay clothing. Since its inception, Stang has had a large number of alumni return as teachers and administrators.


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