Essex Catholic High School
Essex Catholic High School | |
---|---|
Location | |
Information | |
Type | Private, All-Male |
Motto | Ad Jesum Per Mariam (To Jesus Through Mary) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1957 |
Closed | 2003 |
Grades | 9-12 |
Color(s) | Blue and Silver |
Fight song | Onward Essex |
Sports | Fencing, Football, Basketball, Cross-Country, Track & Field, Soccer, Wrestling, Baseball, Hockey, Lacrosse, Tennis, Golf |
Mascot | Eagle |
Yearbook | The Talon |
Essex Catholic Boys High School (formally known as Bishop Francis Essex Catholic High School after 2000) was a four-year Catholic high school located in Newark and East Orange, New Jersey. Essex Catholic High School opened in 1957.[1] It was run by the Congregation of Christian Brothers and sponsored by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark.
History
The school's original location was at 300 Broadway in Newark. In the fall of 1980, the all-male school was moved to East Orange, where it took over the location of the closed all-girl's East Orange Catholic High School. It remained open at that location until June 2003 when it closed due to a lack of enrollment. Concurrent with ECHS's move to East Orange, the Archdiocese created Essex Catholic Girls High School, an all-girls Catholic high school at the former location of Archbishop Walsh Catholic High School in Irvington, N.J.
The school was supported in its early years by the efforts of the Most Reverend Thomas A. Boland, the Archbishop of Newark. In 2003, Archbishop John J. Myers agreed to close the school when the student enrollment hit a record low of 267 students in its final year, down from more than 400 five years earlier.[1] At its peak, enrollment hovered around 3,500.[citation needed] In 2000, ECHS was renamed Bishop Francis Essex Catholic High School.
The area surrounding the original location went into a sharp decline following the 1967 Newark riots. The situation was further complicated by an increase in tuition in the spring of 1970 that doubled the $300 annual cost to $600 per student. The tuition increase was phased in over a period of three school years. The Class of 1971 went from $300.00 in 1970 to $400.00 in 1971. The Class of 1972 went from $300.00 in 1970 to $500.00 in 1971 and the Classes of 1973 and beyond were charged the full $600.00.[citation needed]
The school's 300 Broadway location is listed in the National Register of Historic Places, and had been built in 1927 as the corporate headquarters of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company. The Archdiocese sold the building to a private group, which later opened a nursing facility at the location.
Following the formal closing of the school in 2003, a small group of alumni and supporters attempted to reopen a "new" Essex Catholic High School at a different location. That plan never came to fruition.[citation needed]
Since its closing in 2003, ECHS has maintained an active alumni association, Essex Catholic High School Foundation, Inc. Since 1982, this group has held the annual Alumni Dinner and Hall of Fame Induction, which typically attracts more than 200 alumni, faculty, family and friends. The Foundation awards scholarships to children and grandchildren of alumni. The Foundation also runs other annual fundraising events, among them the 300 Broadway Reception & Tour at the school's original location, an Alumni Golf Outing, and an All-Alumni Reunion at McGovern's Tavern in Newark, N.J. The Foundation also supports Christ the King Preparatory School, a Catholic high school in the Cristo Rey Network, located at the former Our Lady of Good Counsel High School building in Newark. Proceeds from the 300 Broadway Reception & Tour and Alumni Golf Outing go directly to CTK Prep.
Athletics
The baseball team won the Non-Public A state championship in 1966 and won the Non-Public A state title in 1976, defeating Saint Anthony High School (since renamed Trenton Catholic Academy) in the tournament final.[2]
The basketball team won the Public A state championship in 1975 (defeating Paul VI High School in the tournament final) and 1977 (vs. Red Bank Catholic High School).[3]
Notable alumni
- Steve Adubato Jr. (born 1957), television personality, host of One on One with Steve Adubato and former member of the New Jersey Senate.[4]
- Rick Cerone (born 1954), former Major League Baseball catcher who played for the New York Yankees.[5]
- Michael Keogh (born 1950), runner who competed in 1972 Summer Olympics.[6]
- Marty Liquori (born 1949, class of 1967), middle distance track athlete.[7] Liquori was in 1967 the second high school runner to break four minutes in the mile. He participated in the 1968 and 1972 Olympics.
- Bob Molinaro (born 1950, class of 1968), outfielder who played for eight MLB seasons with the Chicago White Sox, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies and Detroit Tigers.[8]
- Mark Murro (born 1949, class of 1967), javelin thrower.[9]
- Edward R. Reilly (born 1949, class of 1967), Maryland State Senator.[10]
- Steve Sullivan (1944-2014; class of 1963), basketball player for the Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team and a member of the USA Basketball Gold Medal teams of the 1967 Pan-American Games and 1967 World University Games.[11]
- Peter Westbrook (born 1952), fencing champion.[12]
- Anthony Parisella
References
- ^ a b "Newark Archdiocese to Close a High School", The New York Times, May 6, 2003. Accessed February 18, 2018.
- ^ History of the NJSIAA Baseball Championships, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. Accessed February 18, 2018.
- ^ NJSIAA Basketball Past State Champions, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. Accessed February 18, 2018.
- ^ Adubato, Steve. "Public vs. Private; It’s more important than ever for families to have education options.", New Jersey Monthly, August 16, 2010. Accessed July 27, 2014. "I went to a neighborhood parochial grammar school for one year in order to attend Essex Catholic High School, an all-male institution that had maintained high academic standards despite being in one of the worst sections of the city."
- ^ Gramlich, Barry. "Passaic Drops A Hammer On BC", The Record (Bergen County), October 3, 1993. Accessed October 23, 2007. "Turn back the calendar to 1971 when former Yankee Rick Cerone was the Essex Catholic quarterback against Bergen Catholic."
- ^ Irish, Jim. "The Manhattan Project; Forty years ago, under brash young coaches Fred Dwyer and Frank Gagliano, tiny Manhattan College was at the top of the track world. Here’s how the school unexpectedly won the 1973 NCAA indoor championship.", Running Times, February 28, 2013. Accessed September 24, 2017. "He landed the top-ranked high school distance runners in the nation that year in Power Memorial’s Tony Colon, who ran 4:06.0 in the mile and Essex Catholic’s Mike Keogh, who notched an 8:54.0 in the 2 mile."
- ^ Marty Liquori Archived 2008-09-18 at the Wayback Machine, USA Track & Field. Accessed July 27, 2014. "Education - high school: Essex Catholic (Newark, New Jersey), 1967"
- ^ Bob Molinaro, Baseball-Reference.com. Accessed April 28, 2015.
- ^ "Prep Javelin Mark" Archived 2016-11-23 at the Wayback Machine, The Arizona Republic, June 1, 1967. Accessed December 1, 2014.
- ^ Edward R. Reilly, General Assembly of Maryland. Accessed July 27, 2014. "Essex Catholic High School, Newark, New Jersey, 1967"
- ^ Georgetown Basketball History: The Top 100 - 34. Steve Sullivan, Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball. Accessed March 24, 2018. "Sullivan, who turned down 42 college offers to attend Georgetown, starred at the former Essex Catholic HS in East Orange NJ."
- ^ Wadler, Joyce. "Public Lives; A Saber Rattler Teaching Sportsmanship", The New York Times, September 6, 2000. Accessed October 23, 2007. "He started fencing, at Essex Catholic High School, only because his mother bribed him with $5."
External links
- 1957 establishments in New Jersey
- 2003 disestablishments in New Jersey
- Defunct boys' schools in the United States
- Defunct Catholic secondary schools in New Jersey
- Defunct schools in New Jersey
- Educational institutions disestablished in 2003
- Educational institutions established in 1957
- Private high schools in Essex County, New Jersey