Xavier University Preparatory School | |
Native Name: | Xavier Prep |
Streetaddress: | 5116 Magazine Street |
City: | New Orleans |
State: | Louisiana |
Zipcode: | 70115 |
Country: | USA |
Coordinates: | 29.9203°N -90.1103°W |
Religion: | Roman Catholic |
Founder: | St. Katharine Drexel |
President: | Joseph Peychaud Jr. |
Principal: | Cheryllyn Branche |
Chaplain: | Ramona Ragas |
Avg Class Size: | 25 |
Schooltype: | Private, All-Girls |
Tuition: | $5,750 |
Grades: | 7–12 |
Age Range: | 12-18 |
Language: | Spanish, Latin |
Hours In Day: | 8 |
Athletics: | Basketball, Volleyball, Cross Country, Softball, Flag Football (seniors only) |
Song: | "In the Crescent Bend" |
Accreditation: | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools[1] |
Rival: | St. Mary's Cougars |
Mascot: | Yellow Jackets |
Team Name: | Yellow Jackets |
Established: | 1915 |
Status: | Closed |
Closed: | 2013 |
Free Label2: | Admissions Director |
Free Label3: | Athletic Director |
Free Text3: | Don McGhee, Coach Lawrence |
Homepage: | www.xavierprep.com |
Xavier University Preparatory School was a private, Catholic high school in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament founded, owned and operated the school, having opened it in 1915 as what would eventually become Xavier University of Louisiana.[2]
Andrew Vanacore of The Times Picayune wrote in 2013 that "Xavier Prep has evolved over nearly a century into a symbol of achievement for girls from the city's black middle class."[3] The school closed that same year, later reopened as St. Katharine Drexel Preparatory School.
Xavier Prep was established in 1915 by Saint Katharine Drexel; its first president was a Josephite priest.[2] It was originally intended to be a revival of Southern University, which had recently relocated from Uptown New Orleans to Baton Rouge due to racist opposition to an HBCU being in the neighborhood.
The school would eventually change its name officially to Xavier, and in 1925 became Xavier University of Louisiana. The university would relocate to its current location in Gert Town while the high school remained uptown.
The school was historically for black children only during educational segregation in the United States. It was coeducational until 1970, when it became an all girls' school. It opened to all races as a result of desegregation circa 1970.
It was closed in 2013.[2] Alumni then purchased the school building and reopened it as St. Katharine Drexel Preparatory School the same year.
According to Vanacore, the word "sisterhood" was used to describe the school community and its former students.[3]
Football championships(4) State Championships: 1936, 1937, 1940, 1941