Milwaukee Catholic Conference

Former Wisconsin high school athletic conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Milwaukee Catholic Conference is a former high school athletic conference in Wisconsin, United States. Consisting entirely of Catholic high schools within the Milwaukee archdiocese, the conference existed from 1930 to 1974 and all of its member schools were part of the Wisconsin Catholic Interscholastic Athletic Association and its successor, the Wisconsin Independent Schools Athletic Association.

History

1930–1960

About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
13km
8.1miles
St. John's Cathedral
St. Catherine's
St. Bonaventure
Pio Nono
Messmer
Marquette University
Location of Original Milwaukee Catholic Conference Members

The Milwaukee Catholic Conference was formed in 1930 by six parochial high schools in the Greater Milwaukee area. Three members were located in Milwaukee (Marquette University, Messmer, St. John's Cathedral) along with Pio Nono in St. Francis, St. Bonaventure in Sturtevant and St. Catherine's in Racine.[1] St. Mary's High School in Burlington joined the conference in 1932,[2] but their stay would be brief as they left two years later to compete as an independent.[3] Membership in the Milwaukee Catholic Conference was brought back up to seven schools in 1935 when St. Stanislaus (later Notre Dame) joined the loop.[4] St. Bonaventure left the conference in 1937[5] before rejoining in 1940. Along with newcomers St. Benedict the Moor, membership in the Milwaukee Catholic Conference increased to eight schools.[6] In 1941, Pio Nono High School became St. Francis Minor Seminary and inherited their place in the conference.[7] The recently opened Pius XI High School joined the Milwaukee Catholic Conference in 1942,[8] taking the place of St. Bonaventure, who left the conference for a second time due to wartime-related transportation issues.[9] They returned to the conference after the completion of World War II,[10] along with Don Bosco High School in 1947.[11] St. Benedict and St. Francis Minor Seminary left the conference in 1948, leaving eight schools in the circuit.[12] Catholic Memorial High School in Waukesha opened in 1952 and joined the Milwaukee Catholic Conference that same year.[13] Membership increased to eleven when two newly opened schools, Dominican High School in Whitefish Bay and St. Joseph High School in Kenosha joined in 1958,[14] and twelve in 1959 when St. Benedict the Moor rejoined.[15]

1960–1974

About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
30km
19miles
St. Joseph
St. John's Cathedral
St. Catherine's
St. Bonaventure
St. Benedict the Moor
Pius XI
Notre Dame
Messmer
Marquette University
Don Bosco
Dominican
Catholic Memorial
Location of Milwaukee Catholic Conference Members (1960-1962)
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
30km
19miles
Thomas More
St. Joseph
St. John's Cathedral
St. Catherine's
Pius XI
Messmer
Marquette University
Dominican
Catholic Memorial
Location of Final Milwaukee Catholic Conference Members

In 1960, the Milwaukee Catholic Conference split into two divisions of six schools each, the White Division for larger schools and the Gold Division for smaller schools:[16]

More information Gold Division, White Division ...
Gold Division White Division
Catholic Memorial Don Bosco
Dominican Marquette University
Notre Dame Messmer
St. Benedict Pius XI
St. Bonaventure St. Catherine's
St. John's Cathedral St. Joseph
Close

This alignment would stay in place for two years, when the conference went back to a single division. This was due in part to the addition of a thirteenth member (the newly opened Francis Jordan High School) and the growth of Catholic Memorial and Dominican beyond the small school enrollment threshold.[17] This number turned out to be a high water mark as Catholic high schools in the Milwaukee archdiocese began to close or consolidate in the mid-1960s. The first casualty was St. Benedict the Moor High School, which closed in 1964 to make room for the construction of Interstate Highway 43 through the north side of downtown Milwaukee.[18] Pio Nono was reopened as a high school in 1965[19] and made its return to the conference in 1968,[20] offsetting the loss of Francis Jordan High School, which closed in 1969 due to lack of adequate facilities.[21][22] In 1972, Don Bosco and Pio Nono would merge to form St. Thomas More High School on the south side of Milwaukee.[23] Membership would decrease to its final figure of nine schools when Notre Dame and St. Bonaventure, the two smallest schools in the conference, left to become charter members of the Classic Conference in 1973.[24] The end of the Milwaukee Catholic Conference would come in 1974, when Milwaukee Lutheran High School left the Midwest Prep Conference and became the first non-Catholic high school admitted into the group.[25] The league's name was changed to the Metro Conference[26] and continued competition until the dissolution of the WISAA in 1997.[27]

Conference membership history

Final members

More information School, Location ...
School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Catholic Memorial Waukesha, WI Private (Catholic) Crusaders     1952[13] 1974[25][26] Metro Classic 8
Dominican Whitefish Bay, WI Private (Catholic, Sinsinawa Dominicans) Knights       1958[14] 1974[25][26] Metro Metro Classic
Marquette University Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic, Jesuit) Hilltoppers     1930[1] 1974[25][26] Metro Greater Metro
Messmer Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Bishops     1930[1] 1974[25][26] Metro Midwest Classic
Pius XI Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Popes     1942[8] 1974[25][26] Metro Woodland
St. Catherine's Racine, WI Private (Catholic, Dominican) Angels     1930[1] 1974[25][26] Metro Metro Classic
St. John's Cathedral Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Eagles     1930[1] 1974[25][26] Metro Closed in 1976
St. Joseph Kenosha, WI Private (Catholic) Lancers     1958[14] 1974[25][26] Metro Metro Classic
Thomas More Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Cavaliers     1972[23] 1974[25][26] Metro Metro Classic
Close

Previous members

More information School, Location ...
School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Don Bosco Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Dons     1947[11] 1972[23] Merged into Thomas More (1972)
Francis Jordan Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic) Cardinals     1962[17] 1969[21] Closed in 1969
Notre Dame Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic, School Sisters of Notre Dame) Redwings     1935[4] 1973[24] Classic Closed in 1988
Pio Nono St. Francis, WI Private (Catholic) Spartans     1930,[1]
1968[19][20]
1941,[7]
1972[23]
Became St. Francis Minor Seminary (1941), merged into Thomas More (1972)
St. Benedict the Moor Milwaukee, WI Private (Catholic, Capuchin) Brown Bombers, Pacers     1940,[6]
1959[15]
1948,[12]
1964[18]
Independent (1948), closed in 1964
St. Bonaventure Sturtevant, WI Private (Catholic, Franciscan) Cardinals     1930,[1]
1940,[6]
1946[10]
1937,[5]
1942,[9]
1973[24]
Independent (1937),
Independent (1942),
Classic (1973)
Closed in 1983
St. Francis Minor Seminary St. Francis, WI Private (Catholic) Maroons     1941[7] 1948[12] Discontinued athletics in 1948
St. Mary's Burlington, WI Private (Catholic) Hilltoppers     1932[2] 1934[3] Independent Midwest Classic
Close


Membership timeline

Full members

 Gold Division  White Division

Football members

 Gold Division  White Division

List of state champions

Fall sports

More information School, Year ...
Boys Cross Country
School Year Organization Division
Pius XI 1967[28] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1968[29] WISAA Class A
St. Catherine's 1969[30] WISAA Class A
St. Catherine's 1970[31] WISAA Class A
St. Catherine's 1971[32] WISAA Class A
Pius XI 1972[33] WISAA Class A
Thomas More 1973[34] WISAA Class A
Close
More information School, Year ...
Football
School Year Organization
Pius XI 1972[35] WISAA
Close
More information School, Year ...
Volleyball
School Year Organization
Dominican 1973[36] WISAA
Close

Winter sports

More information School, Year ...
Boys Basketball
School Year Organization
St. Catherine's 1958[37] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1959[38] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1961[39] WCIAA
Marquette University 1965[40] WCIAA
Messmer 1966[41] WCIAA
Marquette University 1967[42] WCIAA
Messmer 1968[43] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1969[44] WISAA
Pius XI 1970[45] WISAA
St. Catherine's 1971[46] WISAA
Marquette University 1972[47] WISAA
Marquette University 1973[48] WISAA
Dominican 1974[49] WISAA
Close
More information School, Year ...
Wrestling
School Year Organization
St. Catherine's 1957[50] WCIAA
Don Bosco 1958[51] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1959[52] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1960[53] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1961[54] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1962[55] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1963[56] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1964[57] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1965[58] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1966[59] WCIAA
Pius XI 1969[60] WISAA
St. Catherine's 1970[61] WISAA
Pius XI 1971[62] WISAA
Pio Nono 1972[63] WISAA
Thomas More 1974[64] WISAA
Close

Spring sports

More information School, Year ...
Baseball
School Year Organization
Notre Dame 1957[65] WCIAA
Marquette University 1959[66] WCIAA
Marquette University 1962[67] WCIAA
Pius XI 1963[68] WCIAA
Pius XI 1964[69] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1965[70] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1968[71] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1970[72] WISAA
St. Catherine's 1971[73] WISAA
St. Catherine's 1972[74] WISAA
St. Catherine's 1973[75] WISAA
Close
More information School, Year ...
Golf
School Year Organization
Marquette University 1958[76] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1960[77] WCIAA
St. Catherine's 1961[78] WCIAA
Don Bosco 1962[79] WCIAA
Marquette University 1963[80] WCIAA
Marquette University 1964[81] WCIAA
Marquette University 1965[82] WCIAA
Marquette University 1966[83] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1967[84] WCIAA
Pius XI 1968[85] WCIAA
St. Joseph 1972[86] WISAA
Close
More information School, Year ...
Boys Tennis
School Year Organization
Catholic Memorial 1960[87] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1961[88] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1962[89] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1963[90] WCIAA
Catholic Memorial 1964[91] WCIAA
Marquette University 1965[92] WCIAA
Marquette University 1966[93] WCIAA
Marquette University 1967[94] WCIAA
Close
More information School, Year ...
Boys Track & Field
School Year Organization Division
Marquette University 1957[95] WCIAA
Marquette University 1958[96] WCIAA
Pius XI 1959[97] WCIAA
Pius XI 1960[98] WCIAA
Pius XI 1961[99] WCIAA
Marquette University 1962[100] WCIAA
Marquette University 1963[101] WCIAA
Marquette University 1965[102] WCIAA Class A
Messmer 1966[103] WCIAA Class A
Pius XI 1967[104] WCIAA Class A
Messmer 1968[105] WCIAA Class A
Pius XI 1970[106] WISAA Class A
Pius XI 1971[107] WISAA Class A
Pius XI 1972[108] WISAA Class A
Marquette University 1973[109] WISAA Class A
Pius XI 1974[110] WISAA Class A
Close

List of conference champions

Boys Basketball

More information School, Quantity ...
School Quantity Years
Marquette University 16 1937, 1938, 1939, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1948, 1951, 1954, 1959, 1965, 1967, 1972, 1973
St. Catherine's 12 1931, 1933, 1935, 1951, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1966, 1969, 1971, 1974
Messmer 11 1939, 1940, 1944, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968
Pius XI 7 1957, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1973
Don Bosco 6 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1968, 1970
St. John's Cathedral 5 1932, 1933, 1934, 1936, 1944
Notre Dame 3 1948, 1949, 1962
Pio Nono 2 1932, 1937
Catholic Memorial 1 1961
Dominican 0
Francis Jordan 0
St. Benedict the Moor 0
St. Bonaventure 0
St. Francis Minor Seminary 0
St. Joseph 0
St. Mary's 0
Thomas More 0
Close

Football

More information School, Quantity ...
School Quantity Years
Marquette University 14 1936, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1944, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1959, 1960, 1963, 1973
St. Catherine's 13 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1943, 1945, 1946, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1955, 1956, 1957
Don Bosco 8 1953, 1954, 1961, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1970
Pius XI 6 1954, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1968, 1969
Catholic Memorial 4 1960, 1961, 1971, 1972
St. John's Cathedral 3 1934, 1937, 1939
Pio Nono 2 1935, 1936
Messmer 1 1947
Thomas More 1 1973
Dominican 0
Francis Jordan 0
Notre Dame 0
St. Benedict the Moor 0
St. Francis Minor Seminary 0
St. Joseph 0
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI