Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory | |
Motto: | Signum Fidei. Caritas Christi Urget Nos. |
Motto Translation: | Sign of Faith. Christ's Love Urges Us. |
Location: | Cathedral Hill |
Streetaddress: | 1055 Ellis Street |
City: | San Francisco (Cathedral Hill) |
Zipcode: | 94109 |
Country: | USA |
Pushpin Map: | United States San Francisco Central#California#USA |
Religion: | Catholic |
Established: | 1852 (St. Vincent/Cathedral) 1874 (Sacred Heart) 1987 (Cathedral & Sacred Heart merged) |
President: | Melinda Lawlor Skrade |
Principal: | Gary J. Cannon |
Enrollment: | 1,354[1] |
Slogan: | Enter to Learn, Leave to Serve |
Fightsong: | Alma Mater |
Mascot: | Seamus |
Team Name: | Fightin' Irish |
Accreditation: | Western Association of Schools and Colleges[2] |
Publication: | Oracle (creative writing journal) |
Newspaper: | Emerald |
Yearbook: | Shamrock |
Tuition: | [3] |
Endowment: | $16 Million |
Campus: | Urban |
Enrollment As Of: | 2020 |
Free Label: | National Merit Scholars |
Free Text: | 4 (class of 2023) |
Free Label1: | Principal |
Free Text1: | Gary J. Cannon |
Free Label2: | Dean of Students |
Free Text2: | Mario Sazo Nicole Nastari |
Free Label3: | Admissions Director |
Free Text3: | Tim Burke |
Free Label4: | Athletic Directors |
Free Text4: | Phil Freed Caesar Smith Margi Beima |
Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory, commonly known as SHC or SH, is a Catholic school located in the Cathedral Hill neighborhood of San Francisco, California. Founded in 1852, Sacred Heart Cathedral is the oldest Catholic secondary school and was the first co-ed Catholic high school in San Francisco.
SHC is owned by the Archdiocese of San Francisco.
Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory was formed by a merger between two single-sex schools — St. Vincent's and Sacred Heart High School.
St. Vincent's was founded in 1852 as an orphanage and a girls' day school by five sisters of the Daughters of Charity. In 1868, the Christian Brothers would open St. Peter’s Parochial School, which would eventually be renamed to Sacred Heart High School, to accommodate the growing elementary-aged population. Both campuses would be destroyed during the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. St. Vincent’s school would eventually be rebuilt, and moved three more times, finally settling on the corner of Gough and Geary streets in 1938. In 1966, the St. Vincent’s would be razed to make way for St. Mary's Cathedral, rebuilt adjacent to it, then renamed Cathedral High School.
The schools would merge together in 1987 into Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory, after having collaborated together since 1967.[4]
The school is located in San Francisco's Cathedral Hill District, with the two academic buildings located on the corner of Gough and Ellis Streets. A field used by the school's athletic teams for practice is also located on the corner of Gough and Eddy Streets.
On the northwest corner of the intersection is the former Cathedral High School building, now named the De Paul Campus for the Arts in honor of St. Vincent de Paul. It houses the Sister Caroline Collins, DC, Theater, opened in fall of 2010; freshman lockers; the history, visual and performing arts, and Language Other than English (LOTE) departments. Starting in 2020, the DePaul Campus underwent renovations to modernize the front lobby. These renovations are ongoing.
The building adjoins San Francisco's Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Assumption; the school's former building was razed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco to make room for the construction of the new Cathedral. The cathedral's rectory is adjacent to the De Paul Campus, but there is no access to it from the school; the entrance is located on the northeast corner entrance of the campus. Pope John Paul II stayed in the rectory at the De Paul Campus during his trip to San Francisco in 1987, which is marked by a plaque at the entrance of the rectory.[5]
The La Salle campus is named in honor of St. John Baptist de La Salle. This campus has a six-story building which houses school administration offices, the library, the Community Life Center, and the English, Mathematics, Science, and Religion departments. The library occupies the entire sixth story, except for a small chapel and veranda.
The Sister Teresa Piro, DC, Student Life Center, completed in 2004 at an estimated cost of $16 million, houses a 1,500-seat athletic gym (called the Pavilion) and 1,000-seat Dining Hall. The building is adjoined to an older facility housing a gymnasium, weight room, fitness center, and robotics lab.
Tuition at SHC costs $22,000 per student in the 2021-2022 term.[6] SHC provides an array of courses, including college preparatory, honors, and Advanced Placement classes. All students are required to take English and Religious Studies for four years, as well as three years of Math and Social Studies. SHC uses a tracking system for math, with students typically being placed on one of three tracks in their freshman years. Most students additionally opt to take three or four years of Science and a foreign language, and one year of a visual or performing art. Sacred Heart Cathedral enrolls approximately 1,300 students from San Francisco and its suburbs.
The athletic teams, known as the Fightin' Irish, compete in the West Catholic Athletic League. There are 22 teams and 53 sport levels for boys and girls at SHC split into Fall, Winter, and Spring seasons.[7] [8]
In the 2021-2022 school year, Sacred Heart Cathedral claimed its first CIF football title in school history after winning the Division 4-A state championship game.[9]
See main article: Bruce–Mahoney Trophy. Sacred Heart Cathedral's traditional rival is St. Ignatius College Preparatory, also located in San Francisco. The rivalry between the two schools began with a two men who attended the schools. Bill Bruce attended SI and Jerry Mahoney attended SHC. The trophy was inaugurated in 1947 and is named in honor of Bill Bruce and Jerry Mahoney, each an alumnus exclusively representing one of the schools, both of whom were killed in World War II.
The two schools play against each other in football, boys basketball, baseball, and added in 2021, girls volleyball and basketball. In basketball, baseball, and volleyball where the teams play more than one game per season, only the first game counts towards winning the trophy. The trophy goes to the school that wins in three out of the five games.