O'Connell College Preparatory School explained

O'Connell College Preparatory School
Streetaddress:1320 Tremont
City:Galveston
State:Texas
County:(Galveston County)
Zipcode:77550
Country:USA
Pushpin Map:Texas#USA
Schoolboard:President

Mr. Wayne Mallia

Vice President

Mr. Trey Appffel

Members

Ms. Stephanie Doyle

Mr. John Cartwright

Ms. Tammy Jacobs

Fr. Jude Ezuma

Religion:Christian
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Oversight:Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston
Founder:Ursuline Academy Founded 1847

Dominican High School

Founded 1882

Kirwin High School

Founded 1927

O'Connell High School

Founded 1968

O'Connell College Preparatory School

Founded 2007 - Present

Principal:Mrs. Patti Abbott
Ratio:15:1
Type:Private, Coeducational
Tuition:$8,300
Grades:912
Conference:TAPPS
Accreditation:Catholic Schools Accreditation Agency
Team Name:Buccaneers
Newspaper:The O'Chronicle
Established:1967
Enrollment:Approx. 125[1]
Enrollment As Of:2014
Other Grade Label:120
Communities:Galveston County, Texas
Feeders:Holy Family Catholic School, Our Lady of Fatima, True Cross Catholic, Ambassador Preparatory Academy, Mainland Preparatory Academy, Trinity Episcopal
Free Label3:Athletic Director
Free Text3:Mr. Derek Martin
Homepage:http://www.oconnellprep.com
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O'Connell College Preparatory School (formerly O'Connell Consolidated High School) is a 4-year coeducational parochial/private high school in Galveston, Texas, United States that offers university-preparatory programs. It was founded in 1968 as a consolidation of Galveston Island's three existing Catholic high schools: Kirwin High School (Boys, founded in 1927) and Dominican High School (Girls, founded in 1882) and Ursuline Academy (Girls, founded in 1847) and is the only Roman Catholic high school in Galveston County.[2]

History

In the fall of 1968, the religious orders operating the three schools agreed on consolidation as a means of continuing Catholic secondary education in Galveston, offering a broader curriculum than was possible in any of the three smaller high schools. Bishop John Morkovsky, S.T.D., approved the plan and appointed a board of trustees composed of laymen and priests representing all the parishes in Galveston County. The Board named the newly consolidated school after the Right Rev. Monsignor Daniel P. O’Connell, P.A., pastor of St. Mary’s Cathedral in Galveston from 1933 until his death in 1966, and a longtime supporter of Catholic education.[3]

In 2003, after incurring many years of financial debt, Archbishop Joseph Fiorenza announced O’Connell High School would close at the end of the 2003-2004 school year.

Archbishop Fiorenza offered to allow the school to remain open, if funding could be secured that would enable the school to operate without any subsidy from the archdiocese.

In the spring of 2004 a plan was presented to the Archbishop in which a private foundation, the O’Connell Foundation, would be established with funds from alumni and others in the community. The foundation would offset any expenses previously covered by the archdiocese, as well as provide for the lease of the campus, which the Archbishop wanted to sell.

Archbishop Fiorenza approved the plan and on July 1, 2004 the school was reopened as O’Connell Consolidated High School. In the spring of 2007, the school's board of trustees decided to rename the school O'Connell College Preparatory School, to help distinguish it from other local public and private schools of secondary education.[2]

In 2013 O'Connell was awarded a 5 million dollar grant by the Moody Foundation. as reported in the Texas Catholic Herald on February 26, 2013.[4]

In 2018 O'Connell's graduating class received over 1.6 million dollars in scholarship funding, breaking their current record.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Statistical information gathered from Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston's official site http://www.diogh.org/SchoolPages/schoolpages-new/oconnellhighschool-galveston.htm
  2. Taylor, Heber. "O'Connell seeks to redefine itself." Galveston County Daily News. September 23, 2007.
  3. http://www.ochsgalv.org/hb.htm O'Connell Student Handbook
  4. Web site: Texas Catholic Herald News . www.archgh.org . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140904224033/http://www.archgh.org/mobile/default.aspx?pid=500&hid=1280 . 2014-09-04.