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In 1922, bouyed by the
continued growth of the Catholic population in
Rhode Island
and with a deep conviction for the value of
Catholic education, Bishop William Hickey
started a campaign to raise funds for the
construction of two new Catholic high schools,
one in
Pawtucket
and the other in
Newport.
By 1924, Bishop Hickey had raised the required
funds and worked with the De La Salle Christian
Brothers to open the two new secondary schools
for boys.
The
Pawtucket
high school was to be located in a large
Federal-style mansion on
Walcott Street
that had been purchased from the prestigious
Goff family for $95,000.
An additional
$60,000 was required to transform the
residential building into appropriate classroom,
library and science lab space.
When
Brother Anselm Moore, F.S.C. arrived in
Pawtucket
in late August 1924, work was just beginning on
the transformation.
Brother Anselm
worked 12-hour days for weeks overseeing the
construction and enrolling students.
On
September 10, 1924, the new Catholic high school
on
Walcott Street
opened with 59 students, three faculty members
and an athletic director.
The students
adjusted well to the new school, excelling in
academics and athletics.
Seventeen pastors,
representing the parishes which had enrolled
students at the new high school, met with Bishop
Hickey on December 12, 1924 and agreed that its
name should be Saint
Raphael
Academy, in
honor of St. Raphael the
Archangel,
the patron saint of youth.
It
did not take long for the Academy to outgrow its
facilities.
Without a gymnasium
or proper cafeteria space and faced with an
overwhelming number of applications for
admission, Brother Ambrose, who served as
Principal from 1926 to 1932, met with Bishop
Hickey and in 1927 signed a contract for the
construction of a new school building.
On
January 1, 1929 the "new Saint
Raphael
Academy" was
opened, featuring a gymnasium, six classrooms,
science lab, cafeteria, athletic locker rooms
and Principal's office.
In March, nearly
1000 people joined Bishop Hickey at the
dedication of the new building, the enrollment
of which was now 160 boys and eight faculty
members.
From
the 1930's through the 1960's, the Academy
continued to grow and prosper.
SAINTS students
enjoyed success in academics, athletics and
drama.
By the 1970's,
however, the enrollment at Catholic high schools
throughout the region had begun to decline and
the condition of the Academy's facilities had
deteriorated, forcing the tuition to rise.
In
September 1974 Brother Jerome Corrigan, F.S.C.,
Principal, accepted 112 young women from St. Jean
Baptiste
Academy
in Pawtucket,
which had closed that Summer.
To accomodate the added
enrollment, Brother Jerome arranged a lease
agreement for the use of the former
St. Joseph's
School on
Walcott St.,
now known as the
East
Building.
This coeducational
Saint
Raphael
Academy now had an
enrollment of 550 students.
Enrollment
continued to grow throughout the 1970's,
exceeding 700 students by the mid-1980's.
The large number of
students, along with the lack of space for
computers and the arts, led Brother William
Kemmerer, F.S.C., Principal, to launch the
Academy's first capital campaign.
Money was raised to
fund the construction of an annex to the
West
Building
and in 1986 Barbara Farley Hall opened with a
computer lab, art room, music room, a classroom
and new athletic facilities in the basement.
Ten years later,
with tuition rising and a slight decline in
enrollment, Brother Thomas Casey, F.S.C.,
Principal, with the Academy's School Board,
determined that building an endowment fund for
tuition assistance, funding new technology
initiatives and constructing new science labs
needed to be an immediate priority to ensure the
Academy's long-term survival.
The
generosity of more than two hundred SAINTS
alumni helped the Academy to raise over
$5,000,000 in pledges during its
Creating A Future
capital campaign.
This infusion of
much needed capital gave SAINTS the opportunity
to increase its technological capabilities
greatly, to offer additional tuition assistance
to families and reconstruct the science labs.
Additionally, this campaign
allowed the Academy to create the
Healey
Library
Media
Center,
purchase 38 Maynard St.
and therein create new adminstrative offices,
purchase the former St. Joseph's
School and landscape the West Campus.
In
2005 another capital campaign,
The Time Is Now,
was initiated under the
direction of Brother Daniel Aubin, F.S.C.,
President, in order to replace our athletic
facilities and provide space for the performing
arts.
These additions and
renovations will allow SAINTS
to remain
competitive with other Catholic high schools in
the region.
In September 2007,
Bishop Thomas Tobin dedicated our new 30,000 sq.
ft. Athletic and
Wellness
Center, named
Alumni Hall.
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