Mercy Academy

Mercy Academy
Address
5801 Fegenbush Lane
Louisville, (Jefferson County), Kentucky 40228
United States
Coordinates 38°10′12″N 85°38′24″W / 38.17000°N 85.64000°W / 38.17000; -85.64000Coordinates: 38°10′12″N 85°38′24″W / 38.17000°N 85.64000°W / 38.17000; -85.64000
Information
Type Private, all-girls
Motto Excellence and Compassion for Life
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1885
Founder Catherine McAuley
President Mike Johnson
Principal Sarah Peace
Grades 912
Gender Female
Enrollment 542 (2018)
Student to teacher ratio 13:1
Campus type Suburban/industrial
Color(s) Columbia Blue and Gold         
Mascot Jaguar (formerly Missile)
Team name Jaguars
Accreditation Southern Association of Colleges and Schools [1]
Website www.mercyacademy.com

Mercy Academy, in full, The Academy of Our Lady of Mercy, is an all-girls Roman Catholic high school in Louisville, Kentucky that opened in 1885 and is sponsored by the Sisters of Mercy.

In 1869, the first Sisters of Mercy in Louisville arrived from their community in St. Louis to run a struggling Federal Marine Hospital. They began a teaching ministry. By 1872, they had established St. Catherine Academy, and in 1885, they conferred the first high school diplomas under the name of The Academy of Our Lady of Mercy. The high school program continued to grow until a new facility was needed. The Sisters opened a new Academy building at 1176 East Broadway in 1901, where it was to remain until 2007.[2]

Mercy Academy is in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Louisville, and is currently located on a 24-acre (97,000 m2) campus at 5801 Fegenbush Lane in Southeast Jefferson County near the Hurstbourne Lane Extension, with General Electric's Appliance Park complex on the opposite side of Fegenbush Lane, though hidden from direct view by a wooded buffer zone. Mercy was named a Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education in 2000.[3]

References

  1. "AdvancED - Institution Summary". Retrieved June 3, 2016.
  2. Mercy Academy History
  3. "National Blue Ribbon Schools Recognized 1982-2016" (PDF). National Blue Ribbon Schools Program. U.S. Department of Education. Retrieved 20 April 2017.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.