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Towson Catholic High School

Towson Catholic High School
Towson Catholic HS.jpg
Address
114 Ware Avenue
Towson, Maryland, (Baltimore County) 21204
United States
Coordinates 39°24′11″N 76°36′16″W / 39.40306°N 76.60444°W / 39.40306; -76.60444Coordinates: 39°24′11″N 76°36′16″W / 39.40306°N 76.60444°W / 39.40306; -76.60444
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
Motto "A Small School Making a Big Difference"
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1922
Founder Fr. Phillip Sheridan
Closed 2009
Principal Clare Pitz
Pastor Rev. Monsignor F. Dennis Tinder
Faculty 20
Grades 912
Enrollment 244 (2008–2009)
Color(s) Blue and Gold         
Song The Alma Mater
Nickname Owls
Rival Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
Publication The Unicorn (creative arts magazine)
Newspaper The Owl
Yearbook The Hilltop
Tuition $9,500
Admissions Director Alice Rhodes
Athletic Director Jeff Palumbo
Website

Towson Catholic High School was a private Catholic, co-educational high school in the Baltimore suburb of Towson, Maryland, whose closing was announced in July, 2009. At its peak enrollment in the 1960s and 1970s, more than 400 children attended. Founded in 1922 by a Catholic priest, Phillip Sheridan, it was the oldest co-educational Catholic high school in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore when it closed. During its 86 years, the small school was long noted for its successful athletics program as well as personalized secondary-level education.

Towson Catholic High School was founded in 1922 by Phillip Sheridan, priest at Immaculate Conception Church, to provide secondary-level education to Roman Catholics in the growing Baltimore suburb of Towson. The high school's original classroom building was replaced by a modern, masonry structure constructed in 1953 on the same campus as Towson's Immaculate Conception Church and its affiliated Immaculate Conception School for elementary and middle grades. The high school was renowned for its successful basketball program, producing a number of NBA players, including Gene Shue, Carmelo Anthony and Donté Greene. The girls' basketball team was ranked #1 nationwide in the U.S. three times during the early 1980s, as it fielded one of the most competitive teams in Maryland basketball history, going undefeated for 70 consecutive games from 1982 to 1985. Towson Catholic's athletic teams participated in the Baltimore Catholic League.

The Archdiocese announced on July 7, 2009, that the school would not re-open for the 2009–2010 term due to declining enrollment, which dropped from 244 students in the 2008–2009 school year to only 160 anticipated for 2009–2010. The resulting budget deficit of $650,000 projected for the following year necessitated the school's closure, an Archdiocesan spokesman told the Baltimore Sun. The parish's adjacent Immaculate Conception elementary-middle school is unaffected by the high school's closing and is said to be "thriving", according to the Archdiocese. At the announcement of the venerable school's closing, alumni said its students "got a solid education and learned to appreciate classical musicals as well as a good game of basketball". They praised the small school's personalized instruction and sense of community, "where everyone was popular". The news sparked a large demonstration by placard-wielding parents, students, and alumni in front of the school the next day protesting its closing, prompting a front page headline story, "Anger in Towson", in the Baltimore Sun. The protesters said they had no warning of the school's abrupt closing and told a reporter that greater fund-raising efforts should have been made to save the school. Baltimore Archbishop Edwin F. O'Brien said in a news release that the school's administrators had "expended great energy and countless hours to save the school from this fate."


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