Santa Catalina School | |
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Address | |
1500 Mark Thomas Drive Monterey, California, (Monterey County) 93940 United States |
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Coordinates | 36°35′33″N 121°52′7″W / 36.59250°N 121.86861°WCoordinates: 36°35′33″N 121°52′7″W / 36.59250°N 121.86861°W |
Information | |
Type | Private, day and boarding school |
Motto | Motto: Veritas (Truth) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1850 (original school) 1950 |
Founder | Sister Margaret Thompson |
Head of school | Margaret K. Bradley |
Grades | PreK-12 |
Gender | Girls (9-12) Coed (PreK-8) |
Enrollment | 487 (2016) |
Campus | Suburban |
Campus size | 36 acres |
Color(s) | Blue and gold |
Slogan | Do well. Do good. |
Athletics conference | CIF – Central Coast Section |
Mascot | Cougar |
Team name | Cougars |
Accreditation |
WASC California Association of Independent Schools |
Publication | Mosaic (literary magazine) |
Newspaper | The Lamplighter |
Yearbook | Catalinan |
Endowment | $27 Million |
Affiliation | Dominican Sisters |
Head of Upper School | Kassandra Thompson Brenot ’87, Ph.D. |
Lower and Middle School Division Head | Christy Pollacci |
Website | www.santacatalina.org |
Santa Catalina School is a private school in California founded by Sister Margaret Thompson and the Dominican Order in 1950. Situated on 36-acre hacienda-style campus, the Upper School is an all-girls boarding school which also accepts local students. The Lower School serves both boys and girls (preschool through 8th grade). Students in both the Upper and Lower schools are required to wear uniforms. The school emphasizes building a sense of community that challenges its students mentally and spiritually. Santa Catalina is accredited by the California Association of Independent Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. In addition, the school is associated with the National Association of Independent Schools, the Association of Boarding Schools, National Catholic Educational Association, and the National Coalition of Girls' Schools.
The original Santa Catalina Convent was founded by Sister Marie Geomaere, a Dominican sister, in what is now downtown Monterey in 1850, when Monterey was the capital of California. With the help of Rev. Joseph Alemany, O.P., Bishop of Monterey, she created the first Catholic school in California, excluding mission schools. Student were predominantly daughters of local town residents and of nearby Spanish landowners and classes were taught in Castilian Spanish. In 1854 the school was moved to Benicia, the new state capital, where it was renamed St. Catherine's Academy.
In 1950, Sister Margaret Thompson, Mother General of the Dominican Sisters of San Rafael, California, decided to reestablish Santa Catalina in Monterey. After buying the 36-acre campus from a local cattle rancher, Col. Harold Mack, the school opened in the fall of 1950, with Sister Mary Kieran as the first principal. When Sister Kieran died in 1965, Sister Carlotta became principal, a title she held for 35 years. As principal, Sister Carlotta's goal was to "educate the whole child... by guiding young people toward intellectual attainment and social, physical, and spiritual well-being."