St. Nicholas of Tolentine High School

Former high school in The Bronx, New York From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St. Nicholas of Tolentine High School was a four-year, coeducational Catholic high school located in the University Heights neighborhood of the Bronx, New York.[2] A parochial school operated by the parish of the same name, St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church, it opened in 1927 and closed in 1991, after years of declining enrollment.[2] The final class of 68 students graduated on June 14, 1991.[3]

Coordinates40.8622637784035°N 73.9069058825537°W / 40.8622637784035; -73.9069058825537
School typeParochial
MottoLatin: Ad Astra per Aspera[1]
(To the Stars Through Adversity)
Religious affiliationRoman Catholic
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
St. Nicholas of Tolentine High School
Location
2336 Andrews Avenue

,
10468

Coordinates40.8622637784035°N 73.9069058825537°W / 40.8622637784035; -73.9069058825537
Information
School typeParochial
MottoLatin: Ad Astra per Aspera[1]
(To the Stars Through Adversity)
Religious affiliationRoman Catholic
Patron saintSt. Nicholas of Tolentine
Established1927 (1927)
StatusClosed
ClosedJune 14, 1991 (34 years ago) (1991-06-14)
PrincipalSr. Rose Ellen Gorman (1991)[2]
Faculty22 (1991)[2]
Grades912
Enrollment330 (1991)[2]
700 (c.1970s)[2]
Student to teacher ratio15:1 (1991)[2]
Campus typeUrban
NicknameWildcats
YearbookThe Tolentia
Tolentimes
The Tolentian
Annual tuition$2,350 (1991)[2]
Graduates (1991)68[3]
AffiliationSt. Nicholas of Tolentine Church
Close

The school was known for its basketball program.[4] In 1975, Tolentine had the city's top-ranked high school basketball team.[5] It won the Catholic High School Athletic Association basketball championship in 1980–1982 and 1988.[3]

Notable alumni

Former basketball stars include National Basketball Association players Gary Voce[6] and Malik Sealy as well as college basketball coaches Brian Reese and Adrian Autry.[2] Major League Baseball umpire John McSherry attended the school and played for its baseball team.[7] Finbarr O'Neill, former CEO of J.D. Power, Hyundai Motor America and Mitsubishi Motors North America was also an alumnus.[8]

References

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