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St. John's College High School
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | St. John's College High School |
| image | St. John’s College High School.jpg |
| motto | Religio, Scientia (Latin) |
| motto_translation | Religion, Science |
| streetaddress | 2607 Military Road, NW |
| city | Chevy Chase |
| state | Washington, D.C. |
| zipcode | 20015 |
| country | United States |
| coordinates | |
| type | Private |
| religion | Roman Catholic |
| (Lasallian) | |
| established | |
| ceeb | 090185 |
| president | Kevin Haley |
| principal | Ian MacInnes |
| faculty | 125.0 |
| gender | Coeducational |
| enrollment | 1,279 (2024-25) |
| ratio | 9,7 |
| conference | WCAC |
| nickname | Cadets |
| newspaper | The Sabre |
| accreditation | MSA |
| campus type | Suburban |
| campus size | 30 acre |
| colors | Scarlet and gray |
| homepage |
(Lasallian)
St. John's College High School (SJC, SJCHS, or St. John's) is a Catholic high school in Washington, D.C. Established in 1851, it is the third oldest Christian Brothers school in the United States, and was one of the oldest Army JROTC schools until the program was abolished in 2019 in pursuit of a private "leadership academy" program with no relationship to the United States Armed Forces.
History
In 1878, the Brothers purchased the property at 1225 Vermont Avenue NW from the estate of General Montgomery C. Meigs as the site for a new school building. In August of that year, the construction of the building began. At first, it was known as St. John's Collegiate Institute, and in 1887, it assumed the title of St. John's College. That same year, the college was incorporated under the District of Columbia statutes with the power to confer the academic degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts. At the commencement of June 26, 1888 two Bachelor of Arts, four Bachelor of Science, and three Master of Arts degrees were conferred on graduates.
As the undergraduate departments of The Catholic University of America and Georgetown University expanded, it was decided in 1921 by the Board of Trustees of St. John's to discontinue the college department and devote the school facilities to secondary education alone.
Military program
A military cadet company was established at the school in 1915 after an inspection by the War Department, which detailed Major John Augustus Dapray, retired, to the school on December 30, 1915 as the first professor of military science and tactics. The school later established a Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program which was one of 100 original U.S. Army JROTC programs established by the U.S. Congress under the National Defense Act of 1916.
In addition to regular classroom instruction, cadets participate in regional and national competitions as members of the Raiders (called the Rangers until 1994), the drill team (called the "McGovern Rifles";the rifle team (marksmanship club), and color guard. The regiment participates in many events each year, such as the annual Cherry Blossom Parade and Presidential inaugurations (including the 2005 Inauguration of George W. Bush). Originally mandatory, the program became optional in 1991. By 2005, 50 percent of the students participated in the JROTC program, and participation fell less than one-fifth of the student body. In 2019 the military program ended and was replaced with a Cadet Corps program with no relationship to the formal JROTC Program but it still produces students who decide to attend one of the service academies. Current participation estimates have almost a quarter of the school in the cadet corps program, or almost 300 of the 1200 total students.
Athletics
St. John's teams play in the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference.
Football
The 2008 St. John's vs. Gonzaga College High School football game was recognized as one of the top 25 rivalries in the United States by inclusion in the Great American Rivalry Series. In 2013 the varsity football team defeated their historical rival Gonzaga in the WCAC semi-finals, advancing to the championship game for the first time in over 20 years, which they lost to the Dematha Stags.
On November 18, 2017, St. John’s varsity football team defeated Gonzaga 30-7 to win the 2017 WCAC championship. They finished the season being undefeated in the WCAC for the first time since 1976 and winning the school’s first football conference championship since 1989. The 2017 team is also the only St. John's football team to ever defeat both DeMatha (first win since 1994) and Gonzaga twice in the same season. In 2017 the St. John's varsity football team finished their season ranked 17th and 19th in the United States, after starting the pre-season ranked No. 21.
Soccer
In 2007, the St. John's girls' soccer team was ranked #1 in the United States.
Baseball
St. John's varsity baseball team won the 2018 WCAC baseball championship, the fifth consecutive title for the school, and the sixth title since 2010.
Athletic facilities
The campus features three multi-sport turf surfaces used for field hockey, football, lacrosse, rugby, soccer and softball. Baseball plays at Gibbs Field. Gallagher Gymnasium is the home of the basketball, volleyball and wrestling teams. The school also used to have tennis courts on site but they were removed when Gallagher gym was expanded.
Notable alumni
- Lindsay Allen (class of 2013), basketball player
- Michael P. C. Carns (class of 1955), retired United States Air Force General, former Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force.
- Jorge L. Córdova (class of 1924), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico and Puerto Rico's eleventh Resident Commissioner.
- John H. Dimond (class of 1936), Alaska Supreme Court justice.
- Jeff Dowtin Jr. (class of 2015), professional basketball player.
- Edward H. Forney (class of 1927), United States Marine Corps brigadier general. During the Korean War he organized the largest U.S. amphibious evacuation of civilians, under combat conditions, in American history.
- Azzi Fudd (class of 2021), college basketball player for the Connecticut Huskies
- John Geisse (class of 1937), founder of Target and served in the United States Navy.
- Philip Hannan (class of 1931), 11th archbishop of New Orleans.
- Kasim Hill (class of 2017), college football player
- L.J. Hoes (class of 2008), former MLB player.
- Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (class of 2002), Tony-winning playwright of Appropriate.
- Rakim Jarrett (class of 2020), NFL player with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Quinten Johnson (class of 2019), college football defensive back for the Michigan Wolverines
- James "Jim" Kimsey (class of 1957), first chairman and CEO of AOL
- Terrell Lewis (class of 2016), professional football player for the Philadelphia Eagles
- Malik Mack (class of 2023), basketball player
- Princess Ariana Austin Makonnen of Ethiopia (class of 2001), member of the Ethiopian Imperial House of Solomon; wife of Prince Joel Dawit Makonnen
- James J. Malloy (class of 1981), retired United States Navy vice admiral.{{cite web |title=CCLP Speaker Series: VADM James Malloy '81 (Ret.)
- Stanley McChrystal (class of 1972), retired United States Army general who served as Director of Joint Staff.
- Robert M. McGovern (class of 1946), Received the Medal of Honor for his sacrifice in the Korean War.
- Makenna Morris (class of 2020), soccer player
- Tre'Mon Morris-Brash (class of 2019), professional football player for the Los Angeles Chargers
- Kevin Plank (class of 1990), founder and brand chief and executive chairman of Under Armour.
- Keilan Robinson (class of 2019), NFL running back and return specialist with the Jacksonville Jaguars; played college football for the Texas Longhorns
- Joseph Siravo (class of 1973), actor, director, teacher and producer.
- William A. Wimsatt (class of 1935), professor of Zoology, Chairman of the Department of Zoology at Cornell University.
- Nolan Williams, Jr. (class of 1986), American composer, musicologist, and producer.
- James Wood professional baseball player.
References
References
- "Faculty and Staff". St. John's College High School.
- "ST JOHNS COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics.
- MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools".
- "Saint John's College High School". Archdiocese of Washington Catholic Schools.
- (20 November 1986). "St. John's Cadet Tradition Lives". The Washington Post.
- (27 June 1888). "St. John's College: Music and Oratory at the Annual Exhibition". The Washington Post.
- (January 3, 1916). "St. John's Will Have Military Company". The Washington Times Company.
- Staff. (January 6, 1916). "Army: Retired Officers". Army and Navy Publishing Co..
- "DeMatha tops St. John's to capture first WCAC football championship since 2008". Washington Post.
- [http://www.stjohns-chs.org/athletics/current/football_varsity/Coaches.pdf Coach Joe Patterson enters his fifth season at the helm], St. John's official website; retrieved November 25, 2007.
- (December 2024). ["Sports"](https://www.currentnewspapers.com/sports}}{{dead link). Northwest Current.
- [https://www.maxpreps.com MaxPreps]{{nonspecific. (January 2024)
- [http://www.usatodayhss.com ''USA Today'' High School Sports]{{nonspecific. (January 2024)
- [http://www.nscaa.com/hsRes.php?it=1200 NSCAA/Adidas National and Regional Rankings: National 2nd Poll]. [[National Soccer Coaches Association of America]] (September 18, 2007). Retrieved on November 25, 2007.
- (14 May 2018). "Cadets Win Fifth Consecutive WCAC Title".
- "Atletic Facilities".
- "Lindsay Allen 2021 On/Off".
- "General Michael P.C. Carns". United States Air Force.
- "Córdova, Jorge L. (Jorge Luis), 1907-1994". Social Networks and Archival Context.
- (June 17, 1936). "62 at St. John's Graduate, Hear Dennis Connell". The Washington Post.
- "John Henry Diamond". Free Law Project.
- "Jeff Dowtin Jr.". NBA.
- (June 17, 1927). "St. John's College Awards Diplomas". The Washington Post.
- (12 March 2011). "Sophomore Azzi Fudd named 2019 Gatorade National Girls' Basketball Player of the Year". ESPN.
- Finney, Peter Jr.. (2011-09-29). "Archbishop Hannan, paratroop chaplain and Kennedy counselor, dies at 98". Today's Catholic.
- "Football Recruiting - Kasim Hill".
- (2008). "Baseball: Player of the year / Coach of the year". Washington Post Spring.
- Marks, Peter. (June 25, 2016). "A playwright who's at ease with causing discomfort". Washington Post.
- "Rakim Jarrett". 247Sports.
- (8 July 2019). "Michigan football freshman Quinten Johnson could be another Khaleke Hudson".
- "About James Kimsey". Kimsey Foundation.
- Smith, Stephen M.. (2023-10-06). "Former Alabama LB feels it is 'insane' he is an NFL free agent".
- "Malik Mack College Stats".
- (Spring 2018). "Class notes". St. John's College High School.
- "Call to remember". St. John’s College High School.
- Sterner, C. Douglas. "The McGovern Brothers". Home of Heroes.
- (June 22, 2020). "Makenna Morris".
- (3 January 2019). "UCF earns rare commitment from Tre'Mon Morris-Brash during Under Armour All-American Game".
- Graham, Scott. (December 26, 2003). "The man behind the 'armour'". Baltimore Business Journal.
- Pell, Samantha. (June 27, 2018). "Four-star St. John's running back Keilan Robinson verbally commits to Alabama". [[The Washington Post]].
- "St. John's Theatre Hall of Fame".
- (June 15, 1935). "Pastor's Joke Aimed at Girls At Graduation". The Washington Post.
- (22 Oct 2019). "A D.C. composer channels his social conscience into art". Washington Post.
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