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Private, college preparatory school in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

Saint Xavier High School

Academia Sancti Xaverii Cincinnatensis

St. Xavier High School (Cincinnati) formal logo 2011 without shield.svg
Seal of St. Xavier High School (Cincinnati).svg
Address

600 West North Bend Road


Cincinnati

,

Ohio

45224-1424

United States

Coordinates 39°12′30″N 84°30′14″W  /  39.20833°N 84.50389°W  / 39.20833; -84.50389  (St. Xavier High School) Coordinates: 39°12′30″N 84°30′14″W  /  39.20833°N 84.50389°W  / 39.20833; -84.50389  (St. Xavier High School)
Information
Type Private, college preparatory
Mottoes
  • Vidit Mirabilia Magna
    He has seen great wonders
  • Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam
    For the greater glory of God
Denomination Roman Catholic
Patron saint(s) St. Francis Xavier
Established October 17, 1831; 190 years ago  (1831-10-17)
Founder Bishop Edward D. Fenwick, O.P.
School district Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati[1]
Authority Society of Jesus
(Midwest Province)
CEEB code 361–110[5]
NCES School ID 01055649[7]
President Tim Reilly (2018–present)[2]
Principal Dan Lynch (July 2021–)[3]
Chaplain Fr. Terry Baum, S.J.[4]
Faculty 120 full-time teachers[6]
Grades 9–12
Gender Male
Enrollment 1,514 (2018–19[5])
Campus size 110 acres (0.4 km2)[6]
Campus type Suburban
Color(s) Royal blue and white[14]
Slogan Men for Others,[10] Magis
Athletics conference Greater Catholic League South
Mascot Benny the Bomber, Blue Monster
Accreditation AdvancED,[11] Ohio Catholic School Accrediting Association[5] [12]
Newspaper The Blueprint
Endowment $44,382,955 (June 2015)[9]
Tuition $16,120 (2020-21)[8]
Website www.stxavier.org

Saint Xavier High School ( ZAY-vyÉ™r;[15] [16] [17] often abbreviated St. X) is a private, college-preparatory high school just outside the Cincinnati city limits, in the Finneytown neighborhood of Springfield Township, Hamilton County, Ohio, United States.[18] [19] The independent, non-diocesan school is operated by the Midwest Province of the Society of Jesus as one of four all-male Catholic high schools in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Aside from colleges and universities, St. Xavier is the second-largest private school in Ohio[20] and one of the 100 largest schools in the state,[21] with 1,514 enrolled students as of the 2018–19 school year[update].[5] It is the second-largest of the 35 all-male high schools run by the Society of Jesus in the United States.[20] [6]

St. Xavier is the oldest high school in the Cincinnati area[22] and one of the oldest in the nation. It grew out of the Athenaeum, which opened in 1831 in downtown Cincinnati. From 1869 to 1934, the high school program formed the lower division of St. Xavier College, now Xavier University. The high school moved to its present location in 1960.

The Bombers football team and Aquabombers swimming and diving team have a national profile, appearing frequently at state championships and in national rankings. Graduates of St. Xavier include numerous professional athletes, three Olympians, prominent state and national politicians, influential businessmen, and noted authors and actors.

History [edit]

Downtown origins [edit]

St. Xavier, once a part of Xavier University, traces its history to the Athenaeum at Seventh and Sycamore streets[24] in Downtown Cincinnati. The institute, which included a seminary and lay college, was dedicated by the first bishop of Cincinnati, the Most Rev. Edward D. Fenwick, O.P., on October 17, 1831. It was the first Catholic institution of higher learning in the Northwest Territory.[25] Just a week later, the city's first public high school, Woodward College, opened its doors. The Athenaeum stood until 1890, next door to The Catholic Telegraph's printing press.[26]

In 1840, at the behest of Bishop Fenwick,[26] the Society of Jesus began operating the Athenaeum's lay college, which it renamed St. Xavier College, after St. Francis Xavier. The Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians) took over the seminary in 1841,[27] and the college was granted a 30-year state charter in 1842. St. Xavier College originally offered six years of integrated primary, secondary, and post-secondary education, in keeping with the Ratio Studiorum and the original Jesuit college in Messina, Sicily, predecessor to the University of Messina.[28] Day schoolers came from all over the city, while boarders hailed from the Deep South, Mexico, and Cuba.[29] School closed on Thursdays and Sundays until 1917. Originally, until 1851, admission was granted to students ages 8 to 16.[30] Later, a tuition-free elementary school division opened to complement the college.[22] In 1844, the school's elementary division opened a boarding school campus in Walnut Hills but was forced to close its doors two years later and return downtown.[31]

In the 1850s, falling enrollment, threat of bankruptcy, and cholera brought about proposals to close the high school division.[22] Jesuit schools had opened in the South, contributing to declining enrollment. The situation was worsened by the local anti-Catholic and Know Nothing sentiment that culminated in the Cincinnati riot of 1853. Beginning the fall of 1854, St. Xavier stopped admitting boarders altogether, becoming a primarily local institute, to reduce the financial burden on its students' families.[32]

On May 7, 1869, St. Xavier's charter was extended in perpetuity by an act of the General Assembly.[33] Later that year, the school began distinguishing between academic and collegiate departments. Three years of high school would be followed by one year each of the humanities, poetry, rhetoric, and philosophy.[34] [35]

At the close of the 19th century, St. Xavier's athletic teams competed in the Interscholastic Athletic Association of Cincinnati.[36]

Expansion and separation [edit]

A former entrance sign now hangs in the main stairwell. It made its first appearance downtown on August 28, 1919.[37]

The Xavier University seal, like the St. Xavier seal, bears the schools' coat of arms, which consists of five vertical stripes, an arm holding a crucifix, and three seashells.

The seals of St. Xavier and Xavier University (shown here) originate from the seal that St. Xavier College adopted in 1928.[38]

In 1910, St. Xavier College transitioned to an American-style eight-year program.[39] Some students took typing classes at the St. Xavier Commercial School nearby. On October 1, 1906, another branch campus opened in Walnut Hills. This time, St. Xavier Branch High School or "St. Xavier on the Hill" served first- and second-year high school students. Tuition was $60 downtown and $80 at the suburban location (equivalent to $1,728 and $2,304, respectively, in 2020).[40] Classes were held in Walnut Hills until December 1911.[26]

In 1912, the Branch High School moved into the Avondale Athletic Club in North Avondale and became Xavier Academy.[34] [41] On September 10, 1919, Xavier Academy closed[34] as the College of Arts and Sciences moved into its campus. However, science classes remained at the high school downtown, for the time being, as did the evening classes from the Schools of Law, Commerce, and Sociology.[42] [37]

In the late 1920s, St. Xavier High School began competing against Elder, Purcell, and Roger Bacon high schools in baseball, basketball, and football. On October 6, 1931, the four schools founded the Greater Cincinnati League, known today as the Greater Catholic League.[43]

On August 4, 1930, the College became Xavier University, to reflect its transition to the American university model and garner more prestige ahead of its centennial the next year.[44] St. Xavier High School formally split with St. Xavier College in 1934, with Fr. Aloysius J. Diersen, S.J., serving as the High School's first president,[34] but the two schools continued to share resources. Xavier's School of Education conducted practice teaching at St. Xavier. Also, St. Xavier's senior classes studied under Xavier professors in Avondale from 1944 to 1946, to compensate for Xavier's loss of cadets from the Army Air Corps 30th College Training Detachment during World War II.[45] [46]

Finneytown relocation and recent history [edit]

2000

2005

The school campus, before and after its expansion onto the former Girls' Town site.

St. Xavier began its move from the original location in downtown Cincinnati in April 1955 when its president, Fr. John J. Benson, S.J., purchased a 62-acre (0.25 km2)[47] plot in Finneytown. In September 1960, St. Xavier High School moved into its newly built facilities, designed by local architect Albert Walters, in unincorporated Springfield Township.[48] At the time, the facilities were nicknamed the "Finneytown Hilton" for their price tag of over $4 million (equivalent to $27 million in 2019). The original high school building was later torn down and is now the site of a parking lot.[22]

In 1965, St. Xavier produced its first three African-American graduates, Phil Cox,[49] [50] Michael Walker,[51] and Peter D. Samples.[52] The same school year, Myron Kilgore was hired as the school's first African-American faculty member.[53]

Since its move away from downtown, St. Xavier has expanded its facilities dramatically. In 1969, the school added a natatorium with a $500,000 Olympic-size swimming pool (equivalent to $2.73 million in 2019).[22] [54] Keating Natatorium hosted the AAU Indoor National Swimming Championships in 1970 and 1975.[55] [56] St. Xavier's worship space was replaced by Xavier Hall, a multipurpose facility, in 1986. In 1998, a $12.6 million expansion project moved science classes from the basement into a new, three-story wing and added the Holy Companions Chapel and a dedicated intramural gym.[57] During the 2003–04 school year, St. Xavier renovated the football stadium around Ballaban Field, which was built in the late 1960s.[31] Along with the stadium, the school opened a 500-seat[58] theater space, as well as a black box theater, art studios, and renovated music rooms. A new track field replaced the track that once surrounded Ballaban Field. St. Xavier also converted the former Girls' Town of America[59] location across the street into its "South Campus", which includes new baseball and soccer fields.[60] The school added a makerspace in the fall of 2017.[61]

On December 15, 2017, St. Xavier named its first lay president, Tim Reilly, who succeeded Fr. Tim A. Howe, S.J., in July 2018. Until then, all of St. Xavier's presidents had been ordained members of the Society of Jesus.[62] [63]

In 2018, two priests affiliated with St. Xavier during the mid-1960s were named in the Midwest Jesuits' list of clergy members accused of sexual abuse. In 2020, the school removed a chaplain upon receiving allegations of abuse by him during the 1990s.[64]

Keating Natatorium will be renovated in 2021 for $5.5 million.[65]

Academics [edit]

Enrollment
history
Year Enrollment
1840 76
1890 348
1899 425
1911 332
1918 474
1919 489
1921 520
1958 923
1977 1,088
1978 1,146
1979 1,124
1980 1,157
1981 1,234
1982 1,240
1983 1,267
1984 1,267
1985 1,259
1986 1,272
1987 1,283
1988 1,274
1989 1,256
1990 1,272
1991 1,279
1992 1,327
1993 1,379
1994 1,408
1995 1,405
1996 1,410
1997 1,407
1998 1,412
1999 1,428
2000 1,419
2001 1,418
2002 1,476
2003 1,451
2004 1,444
2005 1,458
2006 1,492
2007 1,575
2008 1,575
2009 1,550
2010 1,565
2011 1,565
2012 1,580
2013 1,600
2014 1,625
2015 1,603
2017 1,534
2018 1,492
[6] [22] [66] [67] [37] [68]
[6] [69] [70] [71] [72] [73] [74]
[75] [76] [77] [78] [5] [79]

As of 2018[update], St. Xavier has 1,492 enrolled students,[5] the most of any Catholic high school in an area with the nation's second-highest private school attendance rate.[80] [81] Tuition is US$15,650.00 for the 2019–20 school year.[8] According to St. Xavier, tuition is $1,000 less than the cost of educating a student there.[82] During the 2018–19 school year, 41% of students received financial aid totaling $4.13 million.[8] The faculty consists of 120 full-time teachers, including six Jesuit priests.[6]

Admissions and demographics [edit]

Students apply to St. Xavier High School by taking the High School Placement Test (HSPT)[83] and submitting an elementary school transcript, teacher recommendations, and an enrollment application. Other factors are also taken into account. As of 2017[update], approximately 56% of freshman applicants are admitted,[84] down from 70% in 2014.[69] About a quarter of these students are admitted due to legacy, defined as an alumnus or current student in the applicant's immediate family.[85]

Students come to St. Xavier from throughout Greater Cincinnati, Southeastern Indiana, and Northern Kentucky. As of 2018[update], students of color make up 18% of the student body,[5] up from 12% in 2015.[86] About 80% are Roman Catholic.[5]

In addition to students from the Greater Cincinnati area, St. Xavier admits students from overseas through various foreign exchange programs, such as American Field Service.[87] [88] In particular, partner school Col·legi Casp–Sagrat Cor de Jesús in Barcelona has sent students to St. Xavier and received them into its batxillerat (baccalaureate) program since 1995.[89] [90] [91]

Curriculum and scheduling [edit]

All students at St. Xavier are part of the school's college preparatory program, requiring 23½ credit units for graduation. The program is accredited by AdvancED, the Ohio Catholic School Accrediting Association, and the Ohio Department of Education. Students are not ranked. Grade point averages are computed on an unweighted 100-point scale, which can be converted to a standard 4.0 scale.[5]

The college preparatory program encompasses a variety of subject areas as part of an emphasis on cura personalis ("well-rounded individuals"). The school offers 27 electives aligned with Advanced Placement curricula:[5] [92] [93]

  • Biology
  • Calculus AB
  • Calculus BC
  • Chemistry
  • Chinese Language and Culture
  • Computer Science A
  • Computer Science Principles
  • English Language and Composition
  • English Literature and Composition
  • European History
  • French Language and Culture
  • German Language and Culture
  • Latin
  • Macroeconomics
  • Music Theory
  • Physics 1
  • Physics C: Mechanics and Electricity and Magnetism
  • Psychology
  • Spanish Language and Culture
  • Spanish Literature and Culture
  • Statistics
  • Studio Art Drawing
  • Studio Art 2D
  • U.S. Government and Politics
  • U.S. History
  • World History

As a Roman Catholic school, St. Xavier requires all students to study various aspects of religion and theology each year.[92]

St. Xavier students may receive credit for work completed at the school's partners, Canisius-Kolleg Berlin and Xavier University.[94] During the summers of even-numbered years, a Marine Science elective is offered to St. Xavier students at Hawaii Preparatory Academy in Waimea, Hawaii County, Hawaii.[92] In partnership with the Confucius Institute at Miami University, St. Xavier opened the region's first Confucius Classroom in 2016 to support its Chinese language program.[95] [96] [97]

Freshmen are organized into five houses for the purposes of academic scheduling and guidance counseling.[98] AP World History is offered as part of the St. Francis Xavier House's curriculum.[92]

Daily Mass is offered during lunch periods at the Holy Companions Chapel.

The school year begins in August and ends in May. It is divided into two semesters for grading and course scheduling purposes, but exams are administered quarterly.[94] [99] An ordinary school day begins at 8:00 am and ends at 3:05 pm.[100] The school day is divided into eight periods. Although students register for 6–7 classes in a quarter, only six meet on any given day. Classes are not assigned to a specific period; instead, they rotate in a round-robin schedule designed to reduce stress. Additionally, two days dubbed "X and Y days" are often set aside for block scheduling, to allow for classroom material that would not otherwise fit into a normal-length class period.[101] [102] An iOS application named XSchedule is available for keeping track of the current day's schedule.[103]

From 2011 to 2017, St. Xavier students were permitted to use personal laptops, tablets, and smartphones at school under a voluntary bring your own device policy.[104] Beginning with the class of 2018, St. Xavier phased in a one to one computing policy in which students are required to own an iPad for use at school.[105] However, beginning with the class of 2021, the school has reverted to a bring your own laptop policy that excludes Apple devices including the iPad.[107]

Recognition and graduation [edit]

Each year, a number of St. Xavier students receive honors from standardized testing programs. From 1970 to 2012, 1,000 students were named semifinalists or finalists in the National Merit Scholarship Program.[108] In 2018, 16 seniors were commended and 17 were named finalists in the program. The same year, 603 students took 1,076 Advanced Placement exams. For their high scores, 91 earned Scholar Awards, 46 with honor, 80 with distinction, and of them seven were named National AP Scholars, the highest distinction awarded.[5] In 2006, a record 137 students received Scholar Awards.[109] The class of 2018 posted an average ACT score of 29.2, the highest in the school's history, with five perfect scores. Nine students in the class of 2019 posted a perfect score.[13] [5] In 2021, students posted an average ACT score of 28.5 and an average SAT score of 1282, earning 15 students National Merit Finalist status.[110]

The U.S. Department of Education recognized the school itself as a Blue Ribbon School for the 1983–84 and 1984–85 school years.[111] In 1984, St. Xavier was one of 60 schools recognized by the Council on American Private Education's Exemplary Private School Recognition Project, which surveyed 358 schools nationwide.[112]

Graduation exercises are held at the Cintas Center in late May. On average, about six percent of students in a given class year leave St. Xavier before graduation.[113] Of those who graduate, 99% enter a four-year college or university[5] and 82% are admitted into their first choice school.[113] The University of Cincinnati, Ohio State University, and Miami University received the most students from the classes of 2008–2012.[108] The class of 2018 has matriculated into 82 colleges and universities.[13] According to BusinessWeek, nearly a third of the Class of 2004 pursued a major in business.[114] In 2007, St. Xavier published a directory of over 16,000 living alumni, listing "511 living graduates as medical doctors or dentists, 624 as attorneys, and 610 as engineers".[6]

School traditions [edit]

As a member of the Jesuit Schools Network, St. Xavier shares many Jesuit traditions with other secondary institutions run by the Society of Jesus. For example, graduating students are expected to have acquired the five characteristics defined in the "Graduate at Graduation" profile: Open to Growth, Intellectually Competent, Religious, Loving, and Committed to Justice.[115]

The school holds school-wide Masses on holy days of obligation and other important events, as well as optional daily Mass in Holy Companions Chapel at the center of campus.

Ignatian retreats are offered frequently at St. Xavier. Besides class-wide programs held at the Jesuit Spiritual Center in Milford, optional retreats include Knightwatch for sophomores and Kairos,[116] which was introduced in February 1985 for seniors.[117]

Alma mater [edit]

St. Xavier's alma mater is adapted from that of another Jesuit high school, St. Ignatius High School in Cleveland; in 1958, St. Ignatius gave St. Xavier permission to adapt the song.[118] [119] [120] St. Xavier modified the final two lines, which refer to the school name and colors.[121] This adaptation is sung after school assemblies, athletic events, and commencement exercises.[24]

Fundraising [edit]

The St. Xavier license plate features the school's logo.

St. Xavier's financial aid program benefits from a pair of annual fundraisers, each held annually since 1973.[122] The Walk For X is a 10-kilometer (6.2 mi) student walkathon through Finneytown neighborhoods that preempts classes once a year.[123] The X-Travaganza is a themed dinner auction modeled after that of Loyola Academy in Chicago.[124]

In 2018, the 132nd Ohio General Assembly authorized the Bureau of Motor Vehicles to issue a specialty license plate bearing St. Xavier's logo and the words "The Long Blue Line", referring to the school's alumni.[125] [126] Proceeds from registration fees benefit the school's tuition assistance and guidance counseling programs.[127]

Campus [edit]

The front entrance to St. Xavier was renovated in 1998.

St. Xavier's 110-acre (0.4 km2) suburban campus is located to the north and south of West North Bend Road, bounded by the Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science to the south, Ronald Reagan Cross County Highway to the north, and residential areas to the east and west.[128]

The school grounds include a wooded walking trail, a mock courtroom, and a school history exhibit.[6] The Fred Middendorf, S.J., Nature Trail runs about a third of a mile (0.54 km) behind the athletic fields.[129] [130] Indoors, the Mock Trial team makes use of a specially built classroom that imitates the layout of a courtroom.[131] Along the school's main hallways, recent student artwork hangs beside the Living Walls project, a graphical timeline accompanying 90 years of class photos.[132] St. Xavier maintains 11 computer labs with over 330 computers available for student use.[6] The school library, named for alumnus and Ohio state representative John D. "Jay" Carroll III,[133] contains 23,000 volumes.[134] A makerspace in the Fine Arts wing offers student access to single-board microcontrollers, CNC machines, 3D printers, and large-format printers.[61]

St. Xavier's Finneytown campus features athletic facilities comparable to most colleges, including a new football stadium and a modernized Natatorium which it shares with the Cincinnati Marlins. The Charles H. Keating Sr. Natatorium houses an Olympic-size swimming pool and seats 626.[54] The school has one of the largest tennis court complexes in the area.[135] St. Xavier's soccer field was home to the now-defunct Cincinnati Cheetahs professional soccer team during their 1994 season.[136]

The school's most prominent art installation is the sculpture Open End, a 1983 work by Australian sculptor Clement Meadmore.[137]

[edit]

Athletics [edit]

The entrance to Ballaban Field at St. Xavier Stadium.

St. Xavier's large athletic program was ranked 13th in the nation in 2008 by Sports Illustrated.[138] The school offers 17 Division I athletic programs – baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, football, golf, hockey, lacrosse, rugby union,[139] soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo, and wrestling.[6] The teams are members of the Greater Catholic League (GCL). As one of four all-male institutions that participate in the GCL's South Division, St. Xavier competes with nearby Elder, La Salle, and Moeller high schools.

St. Xavier's sports teams were originally nicknamed the "Conquistadors", or "Conquerors". Eventually, the teams came to be known as the Bombers.[141] Competing explanations of the name change credit American success in World War II, "bombs" thrown by George Ratterman to Charley Wolf in football or basketball games,[141] [142] [143] [22] [144] and a corruption of the nickname given to Jesuit missionaries in World War II, the "Balmers".[145] The Cincinnati Enquirer first referred to St. Xavier's basketball team as the "Bombers" on January 19, 1944;[146] however, it continued to refer to the football team as the "Conquerors" through the end of the year.[147]

The official school mascot is "Benny the Bomber", a bomber pilot. He was reintroduced in 2019 after a 22-year hiatus.[148] Another school mascot is the "Blue Monster" – a shaggy, Muppet-like mascot that takes its name from the student cheering section – appears at games wearing a Bomber football jersey.[149] [150]

Bomber games are often broadcast on Waycross Community Media. Football games are simulcast on Fox Sports Radio affiliate WSAI,[151] clear-channel ESPN Radio affiliate WCKY, and iHeartRadio.[152] [153]

As of February 10, 2017[update], 1,178 St. Xavier students were eligible to participate in OHSAA-sanctioned competitions, placing the school in the AAA boys class for the 2017–18 and 2018–19 school years.[154] OHSAA bylaws prohibit residents of Kentucky and Indiana from competing. In 1985, a lawsuit was filed against OHSAA and St. Xavier on behalf of four St. Xavier students who were residents of Kentucky, claiming that the rule violated the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the United States Constitution. The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed the rule in Alerding v. Ohio High School Athletic Association.[155]

Swimming and diving [edit]

The Olympic-size swimming pool inside Keating Natatorium

Keating Natatorium is home to the St. Xavier Aquabombers and Cincinnati Marlins.

The swimming team, known as the "Aquabombers", has won district, sectional and citywide titles in every year since 1970, capturing 42 Ohio state championships during this span. In 2008, St. Charles Preparatory School of Columbus broke the Aquabombers' nine-year state title streak.[156] The team has earned the distinction of Swimming World national high school swimming team champions in 1973, 1992, 2001, and 2017.[157] [158] From 1988 to 2015, head coach Jim Brower led the Aquabombers to 21 state titles, the most of any men's coach in Ohio high school history.[159] The program produced Swimming World Magazine high school swimmers of the year Joe Hudepohl in 1992 and Jayme Cramer in 2001. Hudepohl was also a member of the United States Olympic Swim Team in 1992 and 1996 and still holds several school, state and national records in swimming. As of 2015[update], junior Grant House holds a junior world record in the 4 × 200 m freestyle relay.[160]

Football [edit]

In 1999, the Bombers football team appeared on Team Cheerios cereal boxes, alongside St. Ignatius High School, in recognition of the schools' football and community service programs, as well as their records in the National Merit Scholarship Program.[161] On December 3, 2005, under Coach Steve Specht, the Bombers defeated Massillon Washington High School to earn the 2005 state football title, the first in team history, after having finished as state runners-up in 1992, 1998 and 2001. The Bombers ended their season with a perfect record: undefeated in the regular season and the playoffs. For this occasion, the City of Cincinnati declared December 14, 2005 "St. Xavier High School Day".[162] In 2007, the Bombers were rated first or second high school football team nationally in a number of pre-season rankings;[163] the same year, St. Xavier defeated DeMatha Catholic High School in a game nationally televised on ESPN.[164] St. Xavier went on to win their second state championship that year in a 27–0 victory against Mentor High School,[165] as well as the National Prep Poll's mythical national championship. The football program's national exposure continued with losses against Highlands High School on CSTV in 2009[166] and against Our Lady of Good Counsel High School the next year on ESPN.[167] Specht won the 2013 Don Shula NFL High School Coach of the Year Award[168] and joined the USA Football board of directors later that year.[169] St. Xavier won its third football state championship on December 2, 2016, defeating St. Ignatius High School, 27-20, in double-overtime. With the win, the Bombers became the first Ohio high school football team to win a state championship after losing five games during the regular season.[170] On November 14, 2020, St. Xavier captured its fourth football state championship, defeating Pickerington Central 44-3, which set the record for the largest margin of victory in Ohio Division I state championship history.[171]

As of 2016[update], the Bombers are one of 15 football teams in the U.S. that wear GPS-based activity trackers developed by Catapult Sports to prevent injuries.[172]

Other sports [edit]

St. Xavier won the state basketball championship in 2000 and finished as runners-up in the 2005[173] and 2007[174] state basketball tournament.

The Cross Country team has also enjoyed a great deal of success, winning Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) championships in 1998, 2000, 2003, 2012, 2013, and 2019 as well as runner-up finishes in 1999, 2009 and 2020. The team has been one of the most consistent teams in Ohio, having qualified to the OHSAA State Championship Race 29 of the past 30 years since 1987.

Since its founding in 2016, the TriBombers triathlon team has won three Ohio state championships and the 2019 USA Triathlon High School National Championship (Independent Club category).[175] [176]

Championship titles [edit]

As of March 2021[update], the Bombers have won 61 boys team Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) state titles, tied with St. Edward High School for the most by a single school in Ohio.[177] Unless otherwise noted, the titles listed below were won at the Division I level.

St. Xavier's OHSAA-sponsored titles are:

  • Cross country – 1998, 2000,[178] 2003, 2012, 2013,[179] [180] 2019[181]
  • Baseball – 2003[180] [182]
  • Basketball – 2000[180] [183]
  • Football – 2005,[180] [184] 2007,[165] 2016,[170] 2020[185]
  • Golf – 1957, 1995,[180] 2008,[186] 2015, 2016[187]
  • Lacrosse – 2018[188]
  • Soccer – 1983[180]
  • Swimming – 1970–1981 (12 consecutive), 1984, 1990–1995 (6), 1997, 1999–2007 (9),[180] [189] 2009–2021 (13)[190] [191] [192]

Additionally, St. Xavier students have won state titles for singles or doubles Division I tennis in 1946, 1947, 2002,[180] and 2006.[193]

St. Xavier's non-OHSAA state titles include:

  • Lacrosse (Ohio High School Lacrosse Association) – 1997,(DII) [194] 2000,(DII) [195] 2015[196]
  • Singles/doubles tennis – 1946, 1947, 2002, 2006[194]
  • Team tennis (Ohio Tennis Coaches' Association) – 2006–2009 (4 consecutive)[194] [197] [198] [199]
  • Triathlon (USA Triathlon) – 2017–2019 (3 consecutive)[175]
  • Volleyball (Ohio High School Boys Volleyball Association) – 2003,[200] 2006,[201] 2019[202]
  • Water polo (Ohio High School Swim Coaches' Association) – 1979,[203] 2015[204] 2016[205] [206]

Non-state championship titles include:

  • Saber fencing (Southwest Ohio Fencing Association League Championship) – 2012(DII) [207]

The arts [edit]

St. Xavier's arts program is centered around three disciplines: performing arts (drama), visual arts, and musical arts. The drama and music disciplines are supplemented by a number of extracurricular programs.

Theatre Xavier [edit]

St. Xavier's co-ed drama group, Theatre Xavier (TX), organizes a drama or comedy each fall, a comedy each spring, and sometimes a smaller January production.[208] St. Xavier students perform alongside students from a dozen public and Catholic high schools throughout the region. Of the 200–225 participants annually, 65%–70% are male.[208] [209] [210] TX performs in the Walter C. Deye, S.J., Performance Center,[211] a 510-seat thrust stage theater space[212] whose size rivals many college theaters. It opened in 2004 as the St. Xavier Performance Center as part of a new fine arts wing.[22] X-Box, an experimental theatre program, put on its inaugural production at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 2018.[213]

TX was directed by performing arts teacher Michele Mascari from 1982 to 2015.[214] It participated in the Cappies of Greater Cincinnati from the awards program's founding in February 2002[215] [216] through 2012.[217] During that time, TX consistently led the city with 80 awards, including five for Best Musical and one for Best Play.[218] [219] Since 2013, TX has participated in The League of High School Theatres along with Anderson, Indian Hill, and Sycamore high schools.[220]

Musical groups [edit]

St. Xavier sponsors a variety of musical programs, ranging from the marching band to a liturgical music group. The Marching Bombers perform at varsity football games.[221]

Off the field, many St. Xavier students participate in musical groups that primarily perform at school concerts and national competitions. The jazz ensemble, known as Out of the Blue, is considered the St. Xavier select band.[222] The wind ensemble consists of over 100 members.[221] The string ensemble consists of two groups: Chamber Blues, made of bowed instruments, and a larger group called Men in Black that includes guitars.[223]

[edit]

In 1974, St. Xavier became one of the first Cincinnati-area high schools to incorporate service-learning into the curriculum, in response to Jesuit Superior-General Pedro Arrupe's call to "form men for others". Community service at St. Xavier is voluntary, in contrast to mandatory service hours at other area Catholic schools.[224] [225] Seventy-five to eighty percent of the student body voluntarily participates in community service programs.[226] [227]

The school's largest community service program is an Advent canned food drive, organized annually since 1926.[228] Each year, students collect hundreds of thousands of pounds of food and delivers them directly to hundreds of families as well as to food pantries in Greater Cincinnati and rural Appalachia.[229] [230] In 2020, students collected 75,410 pounds (34,210 kg) of food and distributed it to 25 food banks.[231]

Student publications [edit]

The Blueprint, the school's student-run paper, is published monthly.[232] Until 2007, the Blueprint was a member of the National Scholastic Press Association.[233] It replaced the Xavier Prep, which was published until at least the 1940s.[144] The Blueprint does not currently offer an online version. Additionally, St. Xavier is undergoing an initiative to organize and archive old editions of the Blueprint dating back into the 20th century.

The school's other two student publications are X-Ray, the annual yearbook, and Xpressions, a student literary magazine founded in 1964.[232]

Other clubs [edit]

  • The St. Xavier Quiz Team, a member of the Greater Cincinnati Academic League (GCAL), has participated in many statewide tournaments under the direction of "Uncle" John F. Hussong, English teacher from 1964 to 2014,[234] [235] [236] and history teacher Ron Weisbrod. The team made three runner-up finishes in the televised It's Academic Super Bowl championship in 1979, 1980, and 1981. The team won its first state championship in 1997, advancing to quarterfinals in the national Panasonic Academic Challenge.[237] It made two runner-up finishes in the early 1990s and in 2001, losing to Beavercreek High School.

Notable people [edit]

Notable alumni [edit]

St. Xavier collectively refers to its graduates as the "Long Blue Line",[238] after the school colors and the blue attire worn at graduation. The school's living graduates number over 18,000, as of 2013[update].[6] Many St. Xavier alumni are well-known figures in the Cincinnati area, and many others have gained recognition nationally and abroad as well. The following list includes those who completed the high school program at St. Xavier College between 1869 and 1934:

Arts and literature [edit]

  • Kevin Allison (1988) – comedic actor and writer[239]
  • David Bell (1988) – mystery author[240]
  • Matt Berninger (1989) – singer for The National[241]
  • Andy Blankenbuehler (1988) – Broadway dancer and choreographer[242]
  • Christopher Bollen (1994) – writer and novelist[243] [244]
  • Phil DeGreg (1972) – jazz pianist[245]
  • John Diehl (1968) – actor[246]
  • Elliott Earls – graphic designer and performance artist[247]
  • Joey Kern (1995) – movie actor, most notably in Cabin Fever (2002), Grind (2003), and Super Troopers [248]
  • Kevin Kern (1992) – Broadway performer in Les Misérables and Wicked [248]
  • John Knoepfle (1941) – poet, translator, and educator[249]
  • Patrick Osborne (1999) – Academy Award–winning film animator and director, Paperman and Feast [250]
  • David Quammen (1966) – science writer[251]

Athletics [edit]

  • Alex Albright (2006) – professional football linebacker, Dallas Cowboys[252]
  • Bryson Albright (2012) – professional football linebacker, Cincinnati Bengals[253]
  • Bob Arnzen (1965) – professional basketball and baseball player[254]
  • Jeff Berding (1985) – president of FC Cincinnati and Cincinnati City Councilman (D)[255]
  • Dana Bible (1972) – football coach, NC State Wolfpack[256]
  • Rocky Boiman (1998) – professional football player and Super Bowl XLI champion, Tennessee Titans[257]
  • Neal Brady (c. 1915) – pitcher for the New York Yankees and Cincinnati Reds[258]
  • Jayme Cramer (2001) – bronze medalist in swimming at the 2003 Pan American Games and silver medalist at the 2006 FINA Short Course World Championships[259]
  • Steven Daniels (2011) – professional football linebacker, Washington Redskins[260]
  • Greg Frey (1986) – professional football player[261]
  • Clint Haslerig (1970) – professional football player[262]
  • Jim Herman (1996) – professional golfer[263]
  • Paul Hove (1973) – bronze medalist at the 1975 World Aquatics Championships[264]
  • Joe Hudepohl (1992) – gold medalist at the 1992 and 1996 Olympic Games; swimming world record holder[261]
  • Brad Jaeger (2003[265]) – Indy Pro Series and Rolex Sports Car Series race car driver[266]
  • Melvin Johnson (1990[267]) – professional football player, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Kansas City Chiefs[268]
  • Charles Keating III (1973) – swimmer at the 1976 Olympic Games[269]
  • Luke Kuechly (2009[270]) – former professional football linebacker, Carolina Panthers
  • Brad Loesing (2008) – professional German basketball player[271]
  • Chris Mack (1988) – head coach, Louisville Cardinals men's basketball[272]
  • Lemar Marshall (1995[273]) – professional football player, Cincinnati Bengals[274]
  • Mike Mathis – professional basketball referee[275]
  • Art Mergenthal (1939) – professional football player and 1945 NFL champion, Cleveland Rams[276]
  • Tom O'Brien (1966) – head football coach, NC State Wolfpack[261]
  • Hal Pennington (1930) – general manager and head coach, Cincinnati Bengals (second AFL)[277] [278]
  • Dominic Randolph (2005[279]) – Arena Football League quarterback
  • Kyle Ransom (2003) – bronze medalist in swimming at the 2005 Summer Universiade[280]
  • George Ratterman (1944) – professional football player[261]
  • Tom Rhoads (1963) – professional football player, Buffalo Bills[281]
  • Shawn Rockey (1994[282]) – professional soccer midfielder, Cincinnati Kings and Cincinnati Riverhawks[283]
  • Pat Ross (2001) – professional football player, Seattle Seahawks[273]
  • Greg Scruggs (2008) – professional football tight end, New England Patriots[284]
  • Chris Sexton (1989) – professional baseball player, Cincinnati Reds[285]
  • Bill Sweeney (1904) – professional baseball player, Boston Doves[286] [287]
  • Pat Todd (1998) – semifinalist in the men's lightweight coxless four rowing event at the 2004 Summer Olympics[288] and the same event at the 2008 Summer Olympics[289]
  • Dod Wales (1995) – bronze medalist at the 1999 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships[290]
  • Chris Welsh (1973) – broadcaster and former professional baseball player[291]
  • Charles Wolf (1944) – former professional basketball coach[292] [261]

Business [edit]

  • John F. Barrett – CEO of Western & Southern Financial Group[293]
  • James Michael Lafferty (1981) – CEO of Fine Hygienic Holding and former regional CEO of Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, and British American Tobacco[294]

Clergy [edit]

  • Most Rev. Edward L. Fedders (c. 1928) – Bishop of Juli, Peru[295]
  • Rev. Francis Xavier Lasance (c. 1875) – devotional writer
  • Most Rev. Henry K. Moeller (c. 1868) – Archbishop of Cincinnati[296]
  • Most Rev. Anthony John King Mussio (1920) – Bishop of Steubenville, Ohio[297]
  • Most Rev. Henry Richter (c. 1854) – Bishop of Grand Rapids, Michigan[298]

Education [edit]

  • Roger Kanet (1954) – political scientist, University of Miami[299]
  • Philip J. Pauly (1968[300]) – historian of science and professor at Rutgers University
  • Joel M. Podolny (1982) – sociologist and former dean of the Yale School of Management; Apple Inc. executive[301]

Law and crime [edit]

  • Michael R. Barrett (1969) – United States federal judge, Southern District of Ohio
  • Joe Deters (1975) – Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney[302] [303]
  • Patrick F. Fischer (1976) – Ohio Supreme Court justice[253]
  • Thomas Geoghegan (1967) – labor lawyer and author[304]
  • Charles H. Keating Jr. (1941) – lawyer, real estate developer, banker, and financier, convicted of fraud in the 1989 Savings and Loan scandal, after whom the Keating Five were named[254]
  • Joseph Peter Kinneary (1924[305]) – United States federal judge, Southern District of Ohio[306]
  • Simon L. Leis Jr. (1952) – Hamilton County Prosecutor (1971–1983), Common Pleas Judge (1983–1987), and Sheriff (1987–2012)[307]
  • Robert O. Lukowsky (1945) – Kentucky Supreme Court justice[308]

Media [edit]

  • James W. Faulkner (c. 1881) – newspaperman and political writer, "Dean of Ohio Correspondents"; founder of and first president of the Ohio Legislative Correspondents Association[309]
  • William J. Keating (1945) – U.S. House of Representatives (R–OH), 1971–1974, former publisher of The Cincinnati Enquirer and chairman of the board for Gannett Company and the Associated Press[310]
  • Joe Kernen (1974) – CNBC news anchor[311]
  • Gustave Reininger – television screenwriter[312]

Medicine [edit]

  • Francis M. Forster (1930[313]) – neurologist and dean of the Georgetown University School of Medicine[314]
  • Vivek Ramaswamy (2003) – founder of Axovant Sciences and Roivant Sciences[315]
  • Branimir Ivan Sikic (1964) – oncologist and cancer pharmacologist, Stanford University School of Medicine[316]

Military [edit]

  • Robert Henry Doolan (1935) – Army Air Force navigator and prisoner of war[317]
  • John Herman Hoefker (1937) – World War II flying ace[318]

Politics [edit]

  • Tom Brinkman (c. 1975) – Ohio State Representative (R – 34), 2001–2008
  • Jim Bunning (1949) – U.S. Senator (R–KY), 1999–2011; U.S. Representative (R–KY), 1987–1999; Hall of Fame professional baseball player[261]
  • John D. Carroll (1973) – Ohio State Representative (D–13), 1985[133]
  • John Cranley (1992) – Mayor of Cincinnati[319]
  • Chip Cravaack (1977) – U.S. Representative (R–MN), 2011–2013[320]
  • John J. Gilligan (1939[321]) – Ohio Governor (D), 1971–1975; father of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
  • Greg J. Holbrock (c. 1924) – U.S. Representative (D–OH), 1941–1943[322]
  • Eric Kearney (1981) – Ohio State Senator (D–9)[323] [324]
  • Bill Kraus (1965) – gay rights and AIDS activist[325]
  • Robert Mecklenborg (1970) – Ohio State Representative (R–30), 2007–2011[326]
  • Peter Stautberg (1982) – Ohio State Representative (R–34)
  • Brad Wenstrup (1976) – U.S. Representative (R–OH)[327]

Notable faculty and staff [edit]

  • Rev. Lawrence Biondi, S.J. (1965–1967) – then a French and Latin teacher; president of Saint Louis University 1987–2013[328] [329]
  • John Dromo (1942–1947) – then a coach of "nearly everything" at the school; later the Louisville Cardinals men's basketball head coach[330]
  • Michael Gallagher – then a Jesuit scholastic teaching English;[ citation needed ] later an author and translator of Japanese literature[331]
  • Robert S. Johnston (1901–1902) – classics, English, and mathematics teacher;[332] later president of Saint Louis University[333]
  • Urban Meyer (1985) – then interning as a defensive back football coach at St. Xavier; former Ohio State Buckeyes football head coach[334] [335]
  • Dan J. Savage (1926–1931) – football and baseball coach; previously Saint Louis Billikens football, basketball, and baseball coach[336]
  • Rev. Robert A. Wild, S.J. (1964–1967) – then a Latin, Greek, and speech and debate teacher; later president of Marquette University[337]

Other notable people [edit]

  • Nick Clooney (honorary 1952) – journalist and politician[338] [339] [340]
  • Bo Donaldson (1964–1967) – musician[341]
  • Al Schottelkotte (late 1940s) – news anchor[342]
  • Admiral Schlei (1890s) – baseball player[343]
  • Jim Tarbell – restaurateur and politician[339]

See also [edit]

  • List of Jesuit sites

Further reading [edit]

  • Ahern, Dennis P., S.J. (February 12, 2012). The Beginning of the Long Blue Line: The Jesuits, Cincinnati, and St. Xavier College (1840–1865). Cincinnati, Ohio: St. Xavier High School. hdl:2374.XAV/1605.
  • Bennish, Lee J. (1981). Continuity and Change: Xavier University, 1831-1981. Loyola University Press. hdl:2374.XAV/724. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  • Froehle, Bryan; Damico, Will; Moone, Joe; O'Neill, Mike; Chung, Jeff (1982). A Century and a Half: St. Xavier High School, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1831–1981. Cincinnati, Ohio: St. Xavier High School. ASIN B0006E9LIW.
  • Fortin, Roger Antonio (November 1, 2006). To See Great Wonders: A History of Xavier University, 1831–2006 (PDF). Scranton, Pennsylvania: University of Scranton Press. hdl:2374.XAV/723. ISBN1-58966-152-4 . Retrieved September 23, 2010.

Notes and references [edit]

  1. ^ Although located within the geographic boundaries of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati and the Finneytown Local School District, St. Xavier is run by the Midwest Province of the Society of Jesus.
  2. ^ Sparling, Hannah (March 22, 2017). "St. X Prez: 'Overwhelming feeling' is gratitude". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  3. ^ Thorp, Tyson (February 10, 2021). "St. Xavier names Dan Lynch as new principal". WCPO-TV. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  4. ^ "Fr. Terry Baum S.J." St. Xavier High School. Retrieved February 25, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "2018–19 School Profile". St. Xavier High School. October 26, 2018. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "X-Cellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2013. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  7. ^ "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for St Xavier High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved June 26, 2012.
  8. ^ a b c "Tuition & Tuition Assistance". St. Xavier High School. 2015. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015.
  9. ^ "Report of Audited Revenues and Expenses from Operations, Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2015". St. Xavier High School Magazine. Fall 2015. p. 11.
  10. ^ Daugherty, Paul (December 2, 2005). "Going to St. Xavier not a phase". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. C1. Retrieved May 5, 2008. A motto there is Men For Others. It's part of the Jesuit tradition, the notion of giving back. They all mention it when you ask what the place meant to them. [ dead link ]
  11. ^ "NCA-Council on Accreditation and School Improvement". NCA-CASI. Archived from the original on September 23, 2009. Retrieved June 23, 2009.
  12. ^ "Archdiocese of Cincinnati". Ohio Catholic School Accrediting Association. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c Tyrrell, Terrence (Summer 2018). "Words From The Principal". St. Xavier High School Magazine. St. Xavier High School. p. 7. The highest ACT average in the history of the school at 29.2, including five students receiving perfect scores on the ACT.
  14. ^ "Cincinnati St. Xavier High School Varsity Basketball Roster 2006 – 2007". St. Xavier High School. 2006. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved July 30, 2007.
  15. ^ Hawley, Brad (March 20, 2016). "Chris Mack to reporter: We're not 'eggs'-avier". Fox19 Now. WXIX-TV. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  16. ^ Daughterty, Paul (June 3, 1997). "Eggs-avier of Ohio? Try Zay-vier, period". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  17. ^ "Ohio gets credit in Clooney film 'The Ides of March'". The Blade. Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press. January 9, 2012. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  18. ^ "2010 CENSUS - CENSUS BLOCK MAP: Finneytown CDP, OH" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved June 26, 2019.
  19. ^ Home. Saint Xavier High School. Retrieved on June 26, 2019. "600 W. North Bend Road Cincinnati, OH 45224" - Even though the tagline is "The Jesuit High School in Cincinnati" the school is not in the Cincinnati city limits.
  20. ^ a b "Fall Enrollment (ADM) - October 2018 Non-Public Buildings" (Excel). Ohio Department of Education. January 18, 2019. Retrieved February 12, 2019. St. Xavier has an average daily membership (ADM) of 1,466 in-state boys and 36 out-of-state boys for a total of 1,502. Only one school, St. Ignatius High School, is listed with a higher ADM of 1,514. ODE does not report headcount for genders with 1–9 students; for each of these entries, nine students is assumed.
  21. ^ "Fall Enrollment (Headcount) - October 2018 Public Districts and Buildings" (Excel). Ohio Department of Education. January 18, 2019. Retrieved February 12, 2019. The table lists Newark High School as the 78th-largest public school building, with a headcount of 1,488. As discussed above, St. Xavier is the second-largest non-public school with an ADM of 1,502 students, putting it at number 59, safely within the top 100. ODE does not report headcount for grades with 1–9 students; for each of these entries, nine students is assumed. ODE does not consider the headcount metric to be equivalent to ADM.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Amos, Denise Smith (October 6, 2006). "St. Xavier: A course in pride" (PDF). The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. A1. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 18, 2011. Retrieved November 20, 2006. 1940s: Sports teams were called Conquerors, until a sportswriter spied George Ratterman (who later became a Cleveland Browns quarterback) and his basketball teammates shooting long bombs. The writer nicknamed them the Bombers and it stuck.
  23. ^ Painter, Sue Ann; Weston, Alice; Sullebarger, Beth; Merkel, Jayne (2006). Architecture in Cincinnati: An Illustrated History of Designing and Building an American City. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. p. 39. ISBN0821417002.
  24. ^ a b "Class of 2005 Commencement" (PDF). St. Xavier High School. June 1, 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 12, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2007.
  25. ^ Bennish 1981, p. 18.
  26. ^ a b c Manning, Robert E. (January 1940). "The Society of Jesus: A Century in Cincinnati" (PDF). Jesuit Bulletin. West Baden Springs, Indiana: Jesuit Seminary Aid Association. Retrieved September 23, 2010.
  27. ^ "History of the Athenaeum of Ohio and Mount St. Mary's Seminary". Athenaeum of Ohio. April 14, 2005. Archived from the original on June 4, 2008. Retrieved September 28, 2008.
  28. ^ Kolvenbach, Peter Hans (October 4, 2006). "Jesuit Superior General Graces 175th Anniversary Celebration". Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved October 5, 2006.
  29. ^ Alumnus (February 1916). "The Athenaeum and After. A glimpse at the early history of St. Xavier College". The Xavier Athenaeum. St. Xavier College: 65–69. hdl:2374.XAV/742. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013.
  30. ^ Fortin 2006, pp. 41, 71.
  31. ^ a b Hauck, Karl; Motz, Mark D. (Fall 2006). "The Legacy of St. Francis Xavier Is Alive and Well in Cincinnati: St. Xavier High School" (PDF). Partners Magazine. Chicago Province, Society of Jesus. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 25, 2012. Retrieved June 8, 2007.
  32. ^ Alumnus (April 1916). "Years of Struggle. A second chapter of Xavier's history, 1853–1865". The Xavier Athenaeum. St. Xavier College: 115–118. hdl:2374.XAV/742. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013.
  33. ^ Alumnus (July 1916). "An Era of Progress. A third chapter in St. Xavier's History". The Xavier Athenaeum. St. Xavier College: 167–170. hdl:2374.XAV/742. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013.
  34. ^ a b c d Buschmann, J. Peter (June 1, 1975). "Chronology: Athenaeum – St. Xavier College – Xavier University". Xavier University. hdl:2374.XAV/589. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 22, 2013. Retrieved September 22, 2013.
  35. ^ Bennish 1981, p. 80.
  36. ^ Shotwell, John Brough (1902). A History of the Schools of Cincinnati. Cincinnati, Ohio: Cincinnati School Life Company. pp. 599–601.
  37. ^ a b c Bennish 1981, p. 128.
  38. ^ Fortin 2006, p. 445.
  39. ^ Fortin 2006, pp. 74–75.
  40. ^ Fortin 2006, p. 90.
  41. ^ Alumnus (December 1916). "St. Xavier Since 1890". The Athenaeum. St. Xavier College. 5: 65–70. hdl:2374.XAV/742. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013.
  42. ^ Fortin 2006, pp. 145–146.
  43. ^ "History". Greater Catholic League. June 14, 2006. Archived from the original on October 15, 2010. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  44. ^ Bennish 1981, pp. 145–146.
  45. ^ Fortin 2006, p. 180.
  46. ^ Bennish 1981, p. 167.
  47. ^ Motz, Mark D. (Spring 2010). "Class of '62 Starts in City, Finishes in Finneytown" (PDF). St. Xavier High School Magazine: 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 12, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
  48. ^ "Deaths – Albert Walters, 87, architect – Xavier U. chapel, St. X. High his work" (fee required). The Cincinnati Post. April 12, 1993. p. A7. Retrieved September 13, 2009. [Albert Walters] also designed St. Xavier High School, St. Dominic Church in Delhi Township, the Monastery of the Holy Name on Erie Avenue and the original St. George Hospital.
  49. ^ Budd, Lawrence (June 23, 2005). "Phil Cox shaping business, academic worlds". The Western-Star. Lebanon, Ohio: Cox Enterprises. Archived from the original on June 17, 2011. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  50. ^ Kent, Jennifer (August 21, 1990). "Risks rewarded – Phil Cox's financial services firm has more than 10,000 clients" (fee required). The Cincinnati Post. p. C6. Retrieved September 13, 2009. 'A lot of times people will ask three times if I'm Phil Cox. I know I've lost business because I'm black,' said [Phil] Cox, the first black graduate of St. Xavier High School where he attended on a scholarship.
  51. ^ "Times, Colors Change at St. Xavier". St. Xavier High School. February 17, 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2011.
  52. ^ "Corrections". St. Xavier High School Magazine. St. Xavier High School. 39 (3): 1. Summer 2011. Retrieved July 28, 2011.
  53. ^ "St. Xavier bestows top honors". The Community Press. March 25, 2011. Retrieved April 8, 2011.
  54. ^ a b Ernst, Ryan (July 24, 2010). "Keating Natatorium is a jewel of a pool". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. C14. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  55. ^ Dressman, Danny (March 22, 1970). "For '72 Olympics AAU Swim Meet Might Be A Prelude". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. 31 – via Newspapers.com. Mexico City '68 and Munich '72: that could well be the theme of the 1970 AAU Indoor National Swimming Championships which will be held April 9–12 at the new Keating Natatorium on the St. Xavier High School campus.
  56. ^ Fuselier, David (April 11, 1975). "Hargitay Has Hall Share A Big Moment". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. 39. And so it happened that Hargitay mounted the winner's stand Thursday at the Keating Natatorium and happily accepted from Gary Hall the award and then his hand.
  57. ^ Winternitz, Felix; Bellman, Sacha DeVroomen (2006). Insiders' Guide to Cincinnati. Globe Pequot. p. 349. ISBN0-7627-4180-5 . Retrieved May 2, 2009. A $12.6 million addition includes a science wing, chapel, and gym.
  58. ^ "St. Xavier Opens New Stadium" (Press release). St. Xavier High School. September 22, 2003. Retrieved September 5, 2008. [ dead link ]
  59. ^ Pulfer, Mike (March 14, 2001). "Goodbye to Girls' Town". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. F1. Retrieved November 28, 2006.
  60. ^ "St. Xavier Athletic Director Announces Retirement from St. X". May 6, 2004. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved November 28, 2006.
  61. ^ a b "MakerSpace". St. Xavier High School. July 2018. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  62. ^ Knight, Cameron (December 15, 2017). "St. Xavier High School names alum Tim Reilly as new president". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
  63. ^ Key, Jennie (December 19, 2017). "Five things to know about new St. Xavier High School president Tim Reilly". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
  64. ^ Mitchell, Madeline (February 22, 2020). "Former St. Xavier High School priest faces allegations of psychological sexual abuse". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  65. ^ Dyer, Mike (January 14, 2021). "St. Xavier High School's Keating Natatorium is set to receive a $5.5 million renovation". WCPO-TV. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  66. ^ Fortin 2006, p. 2.
  67. ^ Bennish 1981, p. 118.
  68. ^ "Catholic High School open house listing". The Catholic Telegraph. 184 (10). Archdiocese of Cincinnati. October 2015. p. 13.
  69. ^ a b "School Profile 2014–2015" (PDF). St. Xavier High School. March 13, 2015. Retrieved August 15, 2015.
  70. ^ James H. Ryan, ed. (1921). Directory of Catholic Colleges and Schools. National Catholic Welfare Council. p. 660. Retrieved May 2, 2009. Students—Total, Boys, 520.
  71. ^ Bunting, Peter (1958). Private Independent Schools: The American Private Schools for Boys and Girls. J. E. Bunting. p. 94. Retrieved May 2, 2009. St. Xavier High School ... Grades 9–12. ... 923 students. Scholarships total $5000 annually.
  72. ^ "Nonpublic Fall Enrollment (1978–2007) by building/grade/gender". Ohio Department of Education. June 17, 2004. Archived from the original (Excel) on August 23, 2011. Retrieved May 22, 2007.
  73. ^ "Xcellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2007. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved September 7, 2007.
  74. ^ "Xcellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2008. Retrieved September 23, 2008. [ dead link ]
  75. ^ "Xcellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2009. Retrieved September 20, 2009. [ dead link ]
  76. ^ "Xcellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2010. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  77. ^ "X-Cellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2011. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013.
  78. ^ "X-Cellent Facts". St. Xavier High School. 2012. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved August 21, 2012.
  79. ^ "High School Open House Calendar". The Catholic Telegraph. 187 (10). Archdiocese of Cincinnati. October 22, 2018. p. 24. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  80. ^ Amos, Denise Smith; Kranz, Cindy (March 31, 2006). "To some parents, discipline is subject worth extra cost". The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. A1. Archived from the original on March 31, 2006. Retrieved April 1, 2006. St. Xavier, the region's largest Catholic high school, will charge $9,475 next year, a 5.3 percent increase. Average Catholic high school tuition in 2005–06: $7,099.
  81. ^ Alltucker, Ken (October 20, 2002). "Tristaters put stock in private schools". The Cincinnati Enquirer . Retrieved December 1, 2008.
  82. ^ "Annual Fund". St. Xavier High School. 2015. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  83. ^ "Entrance Exam". St. Xavier High School. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved September 23, 2003.
  84. ^ "2017–18 School Profile" (PDF). St. Xavier High School. October 2020. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  85. ^ Mueller, David B. "Myth & Mystery: The St. X Admissions Process". Archived from the original on January 23, 2008. Retrieved September 23, 2006.
  86. ^ Howe, Tim A., S.J. (Fall 2015). "Our diversity is our richness". St. Xavier High School Magazine. St. Xavier High School. Inside front cover.
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External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website

High School Requirements For Game Designer

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Xavier_High_School_%28Ohio%29

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