Judge Memorial Catholic High School Explained

Judge Memorial Catholic High School
Logo Alt:Red Cross over an Intertwined, Gold "J" and "M"
Established:1921
Streetaddress:650 South 1100 East
Country:USA
Zipcode:84102
Accreditation:WCEA Western Catholic Education Association, Northwest Association of Accredited Schools[1]
Mascot:Bulldogs

Judge Memorial Catholic High School is a private Catholic high school located in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It is one of three high schools in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City serving students in grades nine through 12. Founded in 1921, the school draws students from across the Salt Lake Valley and beyond. Judge Memorial shares its city location with Our Lady of Lourdes parish and school.

History

The school property was originally the John Judge Memorial Miner's Home, a hospital established by Mary Judge, wife of John Judge, a partner of US Senator Thomas Kearns in Park City's famous Silver King Mining Co. Kearns married Judge's niece, Jennie Judge. Judge Mercy Home, more commonly called Judge Miner's Home, was designed by architect David C. Dart. The hospital was established for the population of Catholic coal miners working in Park City who suffered from black lung. As the need for a hospital dedicated to this cause subsided in direct relation to the decline of coal mining east of Salt Lake, Mary Judge (who along with her deceased husband, John, was the benefactor of the hospital) expressed her wishes to the bishop of the Diocese of Salt Lake to reopen the medical facility as a school. Mary Judge died before the diocese opened the new school's doors. The cornerstone was laid by Bishop Lawrence Scanlan in the fall of 1902 but the hospital was not opened until the fall of 1910. The hospital was originally intended to provide medical treatment for aged and infirm miners. Many miners working in Park City suffered from silicosis, also known as "miners' consumption", the disease that killed Mary's husband John at the age of 48. With Holy Cross Hospital a few blocks away, the need for a miners' hospital was not great; it was remodeled and opened as a school in the fall of 1920, under the name "Cathedral School."

Until 1929 the school was known as Cathedral High School and Catholic Grammar School. Bishop John Joseph Mitty changed the name to Judge Memorial School in 1929.[2] In the fall of 1960, Judge moved into a new school building, and the old building was used as an elementary school until it was torn down in 1966.[2] [3] Judge Memorial was co-educational until 1964. That fall, Bishop Joseph Lennox Federal brought in the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales to run it as an all-boys school. At this time, girls attended St. Mary of the Wasatch High School.[4] In 1970, St. Mary closed and girls once again joined the boys at Judge. That same year, the school added the word "Catholic" to its name.

Awards

Judge Memorial Catholic High School was designated a National Blue Ribbon School in 1984, 1989, 1998, and 2021, and is the only high school in Utah to receive this award more than once.[5]

The school was included on the Challenge Index, which identified it as one of the top schools in the United States in 2020.[6]

Notable alumni

Business & Communications

Government & Community Leadership

Athletics

Music, Film, & Fine Arts

In film

Some of the scenes of the movie Deidra & Laney Rob a Train were filmed in 2016 at this High School.[14]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Northwest Association of Accredited Schools . 2009-07-29 . NAAS . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090125021614/http://www.northwestaccreditation.org/schools/accredited.html . January 25, 2009 .
  2. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hQcKAAAAIBAJ&sjid=-EkDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7105,1031713&dq=judge-memorial&hl=en "Goodbye to Old Judge High," Deseret News, August 5, 1966
  3. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=LlMoAAAAIBAJ&sjid=gUgDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5341,1013122&dq=judge-memorial&hl=en Deseret News, June 4, 1960
  4. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=NPknAAAAIBAJ&sjid=jEkDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3793,6977062&dq=judge-memorial&hl=en Deseret News, May 30, 1964
  5. Web site: NBRS Awardee Database . U.S. Department of Education . September 22, 2021.
  6. Web site: 2020 Top 300 Schools Index . Jay Mathews Challenge Index . September 22, 2021.
  7. Web site: Judge Memorial Catholic High School . National Center for Educational Statistics . September 22, 2021.
  8. Web site: News, Notes, Updates 2017-2018 – Alumni. Judge Memorial Catholic High School. 2 January 2018. en.
  9. Web site: Former Judge Memorial High star Kaden Elliss taken by New Orleans Saints in seventh round of 2019 NFL draft. Judd. Brandon. 2019-04-27. Deseret News. en. 2020-04-14.
  10. Web site: NICKSFIX.COM. www.nicksfix.com. 2020-04-11.
  11. Web site: Stevie Nicks went to my school?. Sloan. Chris. August 16, 2008. Connected Composition. 2020-04-11.
  12. News: Buttars. Lori. True 'Rumours': Singer Stevie Nicks reunites with Fleetwood Mac and her Salt Lake roots; Fleetwood Mac Brings Nicks Back to S.L.. September 12, 1997. The Salt Lake Tribune.
  13. News: Utah guitarist lands spot on Colbert's 'Late Show' . KUTV. Chris Miller. 2017-08-22. "It's just like, 'What can this 14 year-old do?' and then about five, ten minutes into the lesson, I thought, this is the most talented person I've ever worked with.".
  14. Web site: Press Release: June 9, 2016. Utah Film Commission. dead. January 18, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170118041206/https://film.utah.gov/060916-2/. June 9, 2016. January 3, 2017. Melissa. Jackson.