Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy | |
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Address | |
440 Saint Katherine Drive La Cañada Flintridge, California, Los Angeles County 91011 United States |
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Coordinates | 34°10′49″N 118°11′8″W / 34.18028°N 118.18556°WCoordinates: 34°10′49″N 118°11′8″W / 34.18028°N 118.18556°W |
Information | |
Type | Private, Day & Boarding |
Motto | Veritas (Truth) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1931 |
Oversight | Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose |
President | Sr. Carolyn McCormack, O.P. |
Principal | Sr. Celeste Marie Botello, O.P. |
Grades | 9-12 |
Gender | Girls |
Enrollment | 391 (2016-2017) |
Color(s) | Red, Black and White |
Song | "Alma Mater" |
Athletics conference | CIF – Southern Section |
Mascot | Teddy Tolog Bear |
Team name | Tologs |
Accreditation | Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
Publication | Verité (literary magazine) |
Newspaper | Veritas Shield |
Yearbook | Veritas |
Tuition | $21,250 (day) $46,750 (boarding) |
Academic Dean | Kathy Desmond |
Admissions Director | Luana Castellano |
Athletic Director | Stephanie Contreras |
Major Gifts Officer | W. Greg Cornell |
Website | http://www.fsha.org |
Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy is a private, all-girls Catholic high school in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles run by the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose. It is located in La Cañada Flintridge, California, on a 41 acres (170,000 m2) campus near the San Gabriel Mountains.
The school serves both as a day school and a boarding school, with 12% of the student population living on campus.
FSHA’s 41-acre campus was originally the site of the Flintridge Hotel, which was designed and built by architect Myron Hunt in 1926 atop the San Rafael Hills, at the direction of Frank Putnam Flint, a United States senator from what was then called La Cañada. Flint owned the land on which the hotel was built and commissioned Hunt, due to his expertise in designing in the Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival architecture styles. The Flintridge Hotel, soon acquired by Bowman-Biltmore Hotels, was the renamed the Flintridge Biltmore Hotel. It included a large main building with a dining room, lounge and patio, in addition to six smaller cottages meant to house whole families. The grounds also included a pool, tennis courts, golf course, archery range and several large lawn areas. The business failed as the Great Depression continued, and the hotel was closed and sold in 1931.
After the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose took over the property in 1931, the hotel was converted into a school exclusively for boarding students in grades 1-12. The billiards and game room became a chapel, the hotel's beauty salon became the head administrator's office, the bridal suite became a community room for the Sisters, and the Green Room (formerly an elegant ballroom) was converted into a recreational room for students. The main dining room, with wood paneling and chandeliers, is virtually unchanged from 1927 and still used by both boarding students and the Sisters. Senator Flint originally owned many of the furnishings and decorations that remain in the original hotel building.