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Saint Frances Academy (Baltimore, Maryland) facts for kids

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Saint Frances Academy
Saint Frances Academy.png
Address
501 East Chase Street

,
21202

Coordinates 39°18′8″N 76°36′30″W / 39.30222°N 76.60833°W / 39.30222; -76.60833
Information
Type Private
Motto Providentia Providebit
(Providence will Provide)
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
(Oblate Sisters of Providence)
Denomination Catholic
Established 1828; 196 years ago (1828)
Founder Mother Mary Lange, OSP
Oversight Oblate Sisters of Providence
CEEB code 210185
Head of school Deacon Curtis Turner, Ed.D.
Teaching staff 14
Grades 9–12
Gender Coeducational
Enrollment 210
Average class size 18
Student to teacher ratio 15:1
Campus size 2.96 Acres
Campus type Urban
Color(s) Blue & White         
Athletics: Black & Gold         
Slogan "We can. We will. We must."
Athletics MIAA, IAAM
Mascot Panthers
Nickname SFA
Team name Panthers
Rival Everybody
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
Yearbook The Counsellor
School fees $0
Tuition $11,300
Affiliation Catholic school
NCEA School ID 1026047

Saint Frances Academy is an independent Catholic high school in Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1828, it is the first and oldest continually operating Black Catholic educational facility in the United States.

History

Background

In the early 1800s, various Protestant organizations in Baltimore such as Sharp Street Methodist Episcopal Church’s Free African School (1802), Daniel Coker’s Bethel Charity School (c. 1812), St. James Protestant Episcopal Day School (1824), and William Lively’s Union Seminary (1825) created schools for African-American students. While providing a valuable service, they could not meet the demands of Baltimore’s growing free African-American population. (There were no free public schools for children of color in Baltimore until 1866.) Mother Mary Lange recognized the need for education for African American children and opened a school for them in her home in the Fells Point area of the city.

Early years

On June 13, 1828, the Oblate School for Colored Girls opened for its first year at 5 St. Mary's Court in Baltimore's Seton Hill neighborhood, northwest of downtown, near St. Mary's Seminary and College, then located on North Paca Street, the first Catholic seminary in America, founded 1791. It was established with the mission to teach "children of color to read the Bible" —which, since it included teaching slaves, was then illegal.

The following year in 1829, the school taught out of 610 George Street and then 48 Richmond Street (now West Read Street), a few blocks away. The school graduated its first class with ceremonies in 1832.

By 1853, the school changed its name from the Oblate School for Colored Girls to the Saint Frances School for Colored Girls, named after St. Frances of Rome (1384–1440), and later shortened and elevated to the Saint Frances Academy.

In 1871, the school moved to its current location in inner East Baltimore at 501 East Chase Street in what is now the Johnston Square neighborhood.

Modern era

The high school began admitting boys in the 1970s. The school now offers a traditional, co-educational, college-preparatory curriculum for students in grades nine through twelve.

An honors program is available to select students and all students complete a community service component. Independently owned and operated by the Oblates, the school is approved by the Maryland State Department of Education and is accredited by the Commission on Secondary Schools of the regional agency of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.

The student population is still predominantly African-American.

Bill and Camille Cosby donations

In 2012, Camille Cosby, an alumna of a school in Washington run by the Oblates, and her husband Bill Cosby made a donation to assist St. Frances Academy in building a community center in East Baltimore. The community center was originally named after her and her husband, but his name was removed after the revelation of multiple offenses.

Athletics

Football

St. Frances' football program has become the subject of controversy within Maryland in the late 2010s. After former Gilman School coach Biff Poggi took over as head coach, he began aggressively recruiting talented players from inside and outside Maryland, to a greater degree than other private schools in the state did. Within a few seasons, St. Frances became effectively unbeatable by their traditional opponents in the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA), regularly defeating them by wide margins.

Before 2018 those teams told St. Frances they would no longer play them, citing safety concerns as many of St. Frances' recruits were well outside the typical height and weight range for high school players and more in line with college football teams. Some St. Frances supporters believe the opponents' real motives are racial since there had been no complaints when predominantly white teams like Gilman had been similarly successful in earlier seasons. The team won the MIAA championship before the season even started since all those opponents had to forfeit their games, but scheduled intrasquad scrimmages, opponents from as far away as Canada, and road trips to the South for the players' benefit.

Poggi departed the program in July 2021 but the team continued its winning ways, finishing the following season in the top 5 of MaxPreps' 10 national rankings.

Basketball

  • Men's Basketball (MIAA A Conference Championships): 2008–09, 2009–10, 2012–13, 2015–16, 2018–19.
  • Women's Basketball (IAAM A Conference Championships): 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019-20

Notable alumni

Sandra Williams Ortega PhD
Dr. Sandra Williams Ortega
  • Jaelyn Duncan (c/o 2017), American football player
  • Darnell Harris (c/o 2004), basketball player
  • Billie Holiday (1920), jazz singer and songwriter
  • Mark Karcher (c/o 1997), basketball player
  • Angel McCoughtry (c/o 2004), Olympian basketball player
  • Sean Mosley (c/o 2008), basketball player
  • Sandra Williams Ortega, PhD (c/o 1953), U.S. Air Force Officer
  • Devin Gray (c/o 1991), basketball player

See also

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