Jump to content

Our Lady Queen of Angels Seminary

Coordinates: 34°16′29″N 118°27′37″W / 34.2747°N 118.4603°W / 34.2747; -118.4603
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Psigney (talk | contribs) at 09:59, 8 February 2016 (Added new movie, more info on B. Reid). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Our Lady Queen of Angels Seminary
Location
Map

Coordinates34°16′29″N 118°27′37″W / 34.2747°N 118.4603°W / 34.2747; -118.4603
Information
TypeMinor seminary
Religious affiliation(s)Catholic Church
Opened1953
Closed1995

Our Lady Queen of Angels Seminary (OLQA) was the Junior or Minor Seminary for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles from its founding in 1953 until its closure in 1995. It was located in Mission Hills, California, adjacent to Mission San Fernando Rey de España. The Vincentian Fathers were primarily responsible for staffing the school until 1973 when it was staffed by priests of the Los Angeles Archdiocese. Following closure, the western school campus became the home of Bishop Alemany High School, whose campus was severely damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

Early Years (1953-1963)

The campus was opened in 1953 as the successor to Los Angeles College (see Daniel Murphy High School). The school, which operated as a boarding institution during its entire tenure, offered 6 years of study, (four years of high school, two years of college) at which point graduates matriculated to St. John’s Seminary. In 1961, with the opening of the four-year St. John’s Seminary College in Camarillo, California, OLQA became a four-year high school institution.

Expansion and Contraction (1963–1972)

Following a steady increase in students in the late 1950s and the resulting overcrowding, OLQA engaged in an ambitious expansion program, opening a second, adjacent campus in 1964 that effectively doubled the size of the school. The new campus contained eight dormitories; six class rooms, a separate chapel and a recreation room. With this addition, the original campus became known as the West Side, the new campus as the East Side. Although the overcrowding problem was solved, the school soon suffered a steep decline in the number of students, a reflection of national seminary trends following the Second Vatican Council. As a result, the East Side was last used as a separate campus in the 1967-1968 school year. Its use as classroom space continued until the 1970-1971 school year when it was closed. At the present time, the former East Side campus is used as the Administrative Office of the San Fernando pastoral region of the Los Angeles Archdiocese and as a preschool.

1973-1993

With the departure of the Vincentian Fathers, OLQA entered a new era under the administration of diocesan priests appointed by the Cardinal Archbishop. During these years, Spanish replaced Latin in the curriculum by the late 1970s, and there were increased opportunities for off-campus community service. The athletics program was expanded with intramural competition for the first time in the school’s history. This era also saw a dramatic increase in minority enrollment that truly reflected the multicultural diversity of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. After the establishment of the Diocese of Orange in 1976, the school served students from that diocese.

Closure

By the 1994-1995 class, enrollment was down to 150 students and the campus was being shared with nearby Alemany High School, whose campus had been damaged in the Northridge earthquake. Due to the decline in enrollment, the lack of students advancing to the priesthood, and the increasing financial pressure on the archdiocese, the decision was made to close the campus, effective July 1, 1995.[1]

Rectors of OLQA (partial list)

Fr. Victor Graham, CM

Fr. William J. Mahoney, CM

Fr. Raymond Ross, CM

Fr. Walter Housey, CM

Msgr. John J. Reilly

Msgr. Joseph J. Cokus

Fr. Alfred Burnham

Fr. Richard Martini

Fr. James Anguiano

Notable Alumni

Bishop Patrick Ziemann

Dr. G.C. Dilsaver

Cardinal William Levada

Cardinal Roger Mahony

Cardinal Justin Francis Rigali

Bishop Stephen Blaire

Bishop Jaime Soto

Bishop Edward Clark

George Kunz (Offensive Lineman: Notre Dame; Atlanta Falcons; Baltimore Colts) [2]

Bill Reid [3] (Center: Stanford; Southern California Sun, San Francisco 49ers) [4]

Movie and Television locations

Due to its mission style architecture and manicured grounds, OLQA and the adjacent San Fernando Mission were popular locations in several television and movie productions:

TELEVISION

Rescue 8

I Spy [5]

Dragnet 1967 [6]—Excerpt from Season 1: The Christmas Story.[7]

The Incredible Hulk [8]

Falcon Crest [9]

Knight Rider [10]

Remington Steele [11]

MOVIES

Over Silent Paths (1919)

Yours, Mine and Ours (1968) [12]

Pee-wee's Big Adventure (1985) [13]

La Bamba (film) (1987) [14]

References

  1. ^ "LA Times (Oct 15, 1994): Archdiocese Will Shutter High School Seminary; Our Lady Queen of Angels is seen as a too-costly conduit for priesthood candidates".
  2. ^ "Notre Dame Sports website".
  3. ^ "San Francisco 49ers, 1975 Roster".
  4. ^ "Bleacher Report: San Francisco 49ers".
  5. ^ "Season 2: Get Thee to a Nunnery".
  6. ^ "Dragnet at the Mission: Behind-the-Scenes Report".
  7. ^ "YOUTUBE clip from Dragnet 1967".
  8. ^ "Movie Sites: San Fernando Mission".
  9. ^ "Falcon Crest website (scroll WAY down)".
  10. ^ "IMDb - The Ice Bandits (1984)".
  11. ^ "Movie Sites: San Fernando Mission".
  12. ^ "IMDb".
  13. ^ "Eighties Movie Locations That Really Exist".
  14. ^ "I <3 Headstones".