St. Vincent's School for Boys explained

Saint Vincent's School for Boys
Location:Marin County, California, 4miles N of San Rafael
Designation1:California
Designation1 Number:630
Designation1 Date:January 29, 1958
Coordinates:38.0347°N -122.5255°W

St. Vincent's School for Boys is a Catholic boys home in Marin County, California, founded in 1855 by the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul. It has been maintained and enlarged by subsequent Archbishops of San Francisco.

As of 2021, it was a licensed 52-bed Short Term Residential Therapy Program (STRTP) serving boys age 7 to 18 referred by county public health agencies and in-patient psychiatric hospitals throughout Northern California.[1]

The property, which includes an ornate Catholic church on campus, is located near the city of San Rafael. It is one of the oldest institutions west of the Mississippi dedicated exclusively to therapeutic and compassionate care of traumatized boys, and was recognized as a California State Historical Landmark in 1958.

The Saint Vincent Station, a nearby railroad stop on the Northwestern Pacific Railroad, was named after the school, as was the Saint Vincent post office that operated there from 1896 to 1922.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Children and Youth Services: St. Vincent's School for Boys. Catholic Charities SF. 6 October 2021.