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Saint Frances Academy (Baltimore)

Historically Black Catholic school in Maryland, USA

Saint Frances Academy (Baltimore)

Summary

Historically Black Catholic school in Maryland, USA

FieldValue
nameST FRANCES ACADEMY ATHLETICS
image[[File:Saint_Frances_Academy.png200pxcenter]]
streetaddress501 East Chase Street
cityBaltimore
stateMaryland
zipcode21202
countryUnited States
coordinates
religionRoman Catholic
(Oblate Sisters of Providence)
denominationCatholic
oversightOblate Sisters of Providence
affiliationCatholic school
founderMother Mary Lange, OSP
head of schoolDeacon Curtis Turner, Ed.D.
teaching_staff14
ceeb210185
avg_class_size18
ratio15:1
typePrivate
genderCoeducational
fees$0
tuition$12,400 (2024–25)
grades6–12
campus size2.96 acres
campus typeUrban
athleticsMIAA, IAAM
slogan"We can. We will. We must."
mottoProvidentia Providebit
motto_translationProvidence will provide
accreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools
rivalEverybody
mascotPanthers
team_namePanthers
nicknameSFA
colorsBlue & White
Athletics: Black & Gold
yearbookThe Counsellor
established
enrollment260
free_label1NCEA School ID
free_text11026047
homepage

(Oblate Sisters of Providence) Athletics: Black & Gold

Saint Frances Academy is an independent Catholic middle and high school in Baltimore, Maryland. Founded in 1828 to educate African American children, it is the first and oldest continually operating Black Catholic school in the United States.

History

Early years

On June 13, 1828, the Oblate School for Colored Girls was founded by Mary Elizabeth Lange at 5 St. Mary's Court in Baltimore's Seton Hill neighborhood, northwest of downtown, near St. Mary's Seminary and College. The seminary was then located on North Paca Street; founded in 1791, it was the first Catholic seminary in the United States. It was established with the mission to teach "children of color to read the Bible".

The following year in 1829, the school operated from 610 George Street and then 48 Richmond Street (now West Read Street), a few blocks away. In 1832 the school graduated its first class, with ceremonies.

By 1853, the school changed its name from the Oblate School for Colored Girls to the Saint Frances School for Colored Girls, named after St. Frances of Rome (1384–1440). The title was later shortened to the Saint Frances Academy.

In 1871, the school moved to its current location in inner East Baltimore at 501 East Chase Street. This is now within the Johnston Square neighborhood.

Modern era

In the 20th century, the school focused on higher grades. It started admitting boys in June 1974, when it became part of a Catholic school cluster known as Saint Frances-Charles Hall High School. The school returned to independent status in 1991. It offers a traditional, co-educational, college-preparatory curriculum for students in grades nine through twelve.

An honors program is available to select students. All students complete a community service component. Independently owned and operated by the Oblates, the school is approved by the Maryland State Department of Education and is accredited by the Commission on Secondary Schools of the regional agency of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.

The student population is still predominantly African-American.

Bill and Camille Cosby donations

In 2012, Camille Cosby, an alumna of a school in Washington run by the Oblates, and her husband Bill Cosby made a donation to assist St. Frances Academy in building a community center in East Baltimore. The community center was originally named after both her and her husband, but his name was removed after the revelation of multiple sexual offenses by him.

Athletics

Football

The football program was founded in 2008, with one initial $60,000 contribution coming from Gilman School coach Biff Poggi.

In the late 2010s, St. Frances' football program became the subject of controversy in Maryland. After Poggi took over as head coach in 2017, he began aggressively recruiting talented players from inside and outside Maryland, to a greater degree than other private schools in the state. Within a few seasons, St. Frances became effectively unbeatable by their traditional opponents in the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) (which they won in 2016 and 2017), regularly defeating them by wide margins.

Before 2018 those teams told St. Frances they would no longer play them, citing safety concerns as many of St. Frances' recruits were well outside the typical height and weight range for high school players and more in line with college football teams. Some St. Frances supporters believe the opponents' real motives were racial, since there had been no complaints when predominantly white teams such as Gilman had been similarly successful in earlier seasons. The team won the MIAA championship before the season even started, as those opponents who refused to play had to forfeit their games. The school scheduled intrasquad scrimmages, opponents from as far away as Canada, and road trips to the South for the players' benefit.

Poggi departed the program in July 2021. The St. Frances team continued its winning ways, finishing the following season in the top 5 of MaxPreps' 10 national rankings.

Basketball

  • Men's Basketball (MIAA A Conference Championships): 2008–09, 2009–10, 2012–13, 2015–16, 2018–19.
  • Women's Basketball (IAAM A Conference Championships): 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019-20

Notable alumni

Dr. Sandra Williams Ortega
  • Billie Holiday (c/o 1920), jazz singer and songwriter
  • Sandra Williams Ortega, (c/o 1953), PhD and U.S. Air Force officer
  • Devin Gray (c/o 1991), basketball player
  • Mark Karcher (c/o 1997), basketball player
  • Darnell Harris (c/o 2004), basketball player
  • Angel McCoughtry (c/o 2004), basketball player
  • Sean Mosley (c/o 2008), basketball player
  • DaQuan Bracey (c/o 2016), basketball player
  • Gary Brightwell (c/o 2017), football player
  • Jaelyn Duncan (c/o 2017), football player
  • Kingsley Jonathan (c/o 2017), football player
  • Nia Clouden (c/o 2018), basketball player
  • Eyabi Okie (c/o 2018), football player
  • Darrian Dalcourt (c/o 2019), football player
  • Shane Lee (c/o 2019), football player
  • Ace Baldwin Jr. (c/o 2020), basketball player
  • Jahmal Banks (c/o 2020), football player
  • Chris Braswell (c/o 2020), football player
  • Blake Corum (c/o 2020), football player
  • Nikhai Hill-Green (c/o 2020), football player
  • Traeshon Holden (c/o 2020 - transferred), football player
  • Jeffrey M'Ba (c/o 2020), football player
  • Angel Reese, (c/o 2020), basketball player, WNBA All-Star
  • Jamon Dumas-Johnson (c/o 2021), football player
  • Julian Reese (c/o 2021), basketball player
  • Jaishawn Barham (c/o 2022), football player
  • Derrick Moore (c/o 2022), football player
  • Elijah Sarratt (c/o 2022), football player
  • Bub Carrington (c/o 2023), basketball player
  • Michael Van Buren Jr. (c/o 2024), football player
  • DeJuan Williams (c/o 2024), football player

References

  1. MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools".
  2. Banks, Willa Young. "A Contradiction in Antebellum Baltimore: A Competitive School for Girls of 'Color' within a Slave State". Maryland Historical Society.
  3. Morrow, Diane. (2002). "Person of Color and Religious at the Same Time". University of North Carolina Press.
  4. "The Oblate Sisters of Providence and Early African American". Maryland Historical Society.
  5. "The Oblate School for Colored Girls: Historical Background". Maryland Historical Society.
  6. "St. Frances Academy Historic Narrative".
  7. (2020-11-10). "About - Saint Frances Academy".
  8. [https://archive.today/20140827024113/http://articles.baltimoresun.com/keyword/oblate-sisters/featured/5 Hare, Mary Gail. "Baltimore school honors the Cosbys", ''Baltimore Sun'', April 20, 2012]
  9. [https://archive.today/20140827024113/http://articles.baltimoresun.com/keyword/oblate-sisters/featured/5 Green, Erica L., "Baltimore Catholic school to name community center after Bill and Camille Cosby", ''Baltimore Sun'', March 30, 2012]
  10. Stanley, Tiffany. (January 28, 2019). "The Lost Season". [[Washington Post Magazine]].
  11. (2021-11-22). "High school football rankings: St. Frances Academy moves to No. 5 in MaxPreps Top 25 after 34-24 win over IMG Academy - MaxPreps".
  12. "MIAA A Conference Basketball Championships". Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association.
  13. "IAAM A Conference Basketball Championships". Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland.
  14. (3 March 2021). "As Billie Holiday biopic celebrates Golden Globe win for lead actress, a look back at the jazz legend raised in Baltimore". Baltimore Sun.
  15. (19 January 2012). "Riding the black history trail, again". The Catholic Review.
  16. "Kingsley Jonathan". [[Syracuse Orange]].
  17. "nia-clouden".
  18. (December 15, 2017). "Defensive Player of the Year: Eyabi Anoma St. Frances". The Baltimore Sun.
  19. (3 January 2019). "Center of attention: Alabama signee Darrian Dalcourt made position switch in high school".
  20. (17 April 2018). "St. Frances All-Metro linebacker Shane Lee commits to Alabama".
  21. "Adrian "Ace" Baldwin Jr. - 2022-23 - Men's Basketball".
  22. SamuraiFoochs. (December 18, 2019). "WR Jahmal Banks Signs With Wake Forest".
  23. (November 25, 2018). "St. Frances defensive end Chris Braswell commits to Alabama". [[Baltimore Sun]].
  24. (December 6, 2019). "St. Frances running back Blake Corum named Gatorade Maryland Football Player of the Year". [[The Baltimore Sun]].
  25. (23 May 2019). "Michigan football picks up 3rd commitment from St. Frances Academy for 2020".
  26. "Traeshon Holden - Football".
  27. (28 August 2018). "European DT Jeffrey M'ba Makes Last Second Switch, Will Play for St. Frances After All".
  28. "Angel Reese".
  29. Page, Fletcher. "UGA football lands four-star OLB Jamon Dumas-Johnson".
  30. "Google Search".
  31. (11 December 2021). "St. Frances senior LB Jaishawn Barham, one of nation's top recruits, commits to South Carolina".
  32. "Derrick Moore". University of Michigan.
  33. Staff reports. (2020-01-20). "Colonial Forge football standout Elijah Sarratt transferring to St. Frances Academy".
  34. (27 June 2024). "Carlton 'Bub' Carrington, one year removed from St. Frances in Baltimore, becomes an NBA Lottery pick".
  35. Danois, Alejandro. (2023-12-12). "St. Frances quarterback Michael Van Buren picks Mississippi State".
  36. (2023-07-04). "St. Frances 4-star RB DeJuan Williams commits to Maryland, continuing Terps’ in-state surge".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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