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Cardinal Mooney High School (Youngstown, Ohio)

Cardinal Mooney High School
Cardinal Mooney High School (Youngstown, Ohio) (logo).jpg
Address
2545 Erie Street
Youngstown, Ohio, (Mahoning County) 44507
United States
Coordinates 41°4′27.61″N 80°39′6.30″W / 41.0743361°N 80.6517500°W / 41.0743361; -80.6517500Coordinates: 41°4′27.61″N 80°39′6.30″W / 41.0743361°N 80.6517500°W / 41.0743361; -80.6517500
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
Motto Sanctity, Scholarship, and Discipline
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1956
President Mark Oles
Principal Mark Vollmer
Faculty 48
Grades 912
Enrollment 476 (2015-2016)
Student to teacher ratio 14:1
Color(s) Red and Gold          
Mascot Cardinals
Rivals Ursuline High School Boardman High School
Newspaper The Beakon
Yearbook The Eminence
Website

Cardinal Mooney High School is a coeducational Catholic high school in Youngstown, Ohio.

Cardinal Mooney was founded by Anthony Congemi in 1956 and is run by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown. In the early 1950s, the Diocese of Youngstown recognized the need to expand Ursuline High School and to build a new parochial high school on the southside. In 1953, Bishop Emmett M. Walsh obtained the present site of Cardinal Mooney High School from the Youngstown Parks Department and began the organization of a high school fundraising committee.

Ground was broken in 1954, and in the fall of 1955 the first freshman class was organized and began attending classes at the old Glenmary convent. Construction of Cardinal Mooney was completed in time for the first day of school in September 1956. A total of 610 students were enrolled as freshmen or sophomores. The school was named (against his wishes) after Cardinal Edward Mooney, a former southsider, who was the Archbishop of Detroit. He had distinguished himself as a scholar and Vatican diplomat.

Father William Anthony Hughes, who recently retired as Bishop of Covington, Kentucky, was named the school's first principal. Red and Gold were selected as the school colors. They symbolized the blood of the martyrs, and the responsibility of all Christians to accept suffering and the Blessed Sacrament.

The initial faculty included sisters from the Ursuline, Dominican, Notre Dame and Vincentian communities, two priests and five lay teachers.

In June 1959 the first graduating class celebrated Baccalaureate Mass at St. Columba Cathedral, and on June 7 graduation ceremonies were held at Stambaugh Auditorium.


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