St. John's College High School
St. John's College High School in Washington, D.C., established in 1851, is the second oldest Christian Brothers School in the United States, and the oldest Army JROTC school. It was founded by Brother John of Mary, F.S.C., and two other Christian Brothers in St. Matthew's parish, at 15th and G Streets.
History
St. John's College was established for young men by Brother John of Mary, F.S.C., and two other Christian Brothers in St. Matthew's parish, 15th and G Streets NW. The three men had been members of the faculty of Calvert Hall College, Baltimore, since its founding in 1845. Because of space limitations, in 1866 the Brothers moved the school to Carroll Hall at 10th and G Streets NW at the invitation of Father Walter. In 1868, the Brothers returned to St. Matthew's parish at the request of Father Charles White, who had built a new school named St. Matthew's Institute at the corner of 16th and L Streets NW.In 1878, the Brothers purchased the property at 1225 Vermont Avenue NW from the estate of General Montgomery C. Meigs as the site for a new school building. In August of that year, the construction of the building was begun. At first it was known as St. John's Collegiate Institute, and finally, in 1887, it assumed the title of St. John's College. That same year, the college was incorporated under the District of Columbia statutes with the power to confer the academic degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts. At the commencement of June 26, 1888 two Bachelor of Arts, four Bachelor of Science, and three Master of Arts degrees were conferred on graduates.
As the undergraduate departments of The Catholic University of America and Georgetown University expanded, it was decided in 1921 by the Board of Trustees of St. John's to discontinue the college department and devote the school facilities to secondary education alone. In the meantime, St. John's did pioneer work in commercial education by opening a school of commerce and finance at 13th and Massachusetts Avenue NW. Three years after the college department was discontinued, the annex building, housing the gym, swimming pool, and freshman classes, was built.
St. John's grew for the next thirty years, until it became apparent that the Vermont Avenue facilities were no longer adequate. With further expansion in mind, the Brothers purchased the present campus bounded by Rock Creek Park. This property, together with the mansion located there, provided sufficient space for the freshman classes and athletic events. As the Vermont Avenue buildings became less useful, the Brothers decided to build a new school on the Military Road Campus. The new St. John's opened to more than one thousand students in September 1959. In 1991 the school became a co-educational military optional institution.
In 1977 a man wearing a blue parka with a fur-lined hood and a surgical mask entered the cafeteria and joined the lunch line, then attempted to rob the cashier. The school business director, William McGregor, confronted the suspect and consequently was shot in the face, right leg and arm and below his right ear in the confrontation according to the police. The suspect exited the building and shot a student in the shoulder during his escape.
Athletics
St. John's teams play in the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference.Boys' sports
- Baseball
- Basketball
- Football
- Golf
- Ice hockey
- Lacrosse
- Rugby
- Soccer
- Tennis
- Wrestling
- Basketball
- Equestrian
- Field hockey
- Ice hockey
- Lacrosse
- Soccer
- Softball
- Tennis
- Volleyball
- Crew
- Cross country
- Swim and dive
- Track and field
Football
On November 18, 2017, St. John’s varsity football team defeated Gonzaga 30-7 to win the 2017 WCAC championship. They finished the season having gone undefeated in the WCAC for the first time since 1976 and having won the school’s first football conference championship since 1989. The 2017 team is also the only St. John's football team to ever defeat both DeMatha and Gonzaga twice in the same season. In 2017 the St. John's varsity football team finished their season ranked 17th and 19th in the country, after starting the pre-season ranked No. 21.
Soccer
In 2007, the St. John's girls' soccer team was ranked #1 in the nation in early September. After finishing with two losses for the season, they were ranked #5. In 2011 they were ranked #15 in the nation at the end of the season.Baseball
St. John's varsity baseball team won the 2018 WCAC baseball championship, the fifth consecutive title for the school, and the sixth title since 2010.Athletic facilities
The campus features three multi-sport turf surfaces used for field hockey, football, lacrosse, rugby, soccer and softball. Baseball plays at Gibbs Field. Gallagher Gymnasium is the home of the basketball, volleyball and wrestling teams. The school also has four tennis courts used by the tennis program.Military Program
A military cadet company was established at the school in 1915 after an inspection by the War Department, which detailed Major John Augustus Dapray, retired, to the school on December 30, 1915 as the first professor of military science and tactics. The school later established a Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program, and was one of 100 original U.S. Army JROTC programs established by the U.S. Congress under the National Defense Act of 1916.In addition to regular classroom instruction, cadets participate in regional and national competitions as members of Raiders, the drill team, rifle team, and color guard. The regiment participates in many events each year, such as the annual Cherry Blossom Parade and Presidential inaugurations. Originally mandatory, the program became optional in 1991. By 2005, 50 percent of the students participated in the JROTC program, and current participation is less than one-fifth of the student body.
Notable alumni
- Dr. Arthur H. Glennan, former Assistant Surgeon General of the U.S. PHS Commissioned Corps
- Leo A. Rover, United States Attorney for the District of Columbia 1928-1934, 1953-1956.
- Jorge L. Córdova, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico and Puerto Rico's eleventh Resident Commissioner.
- Edward H. Forney, United States Marine Corps brigadier general. During the Korean War he organized the largest U.S. amphibious evacuation of civilians, under combat conditions, in American history.
- Edward L. Schlanser, Major General of the U.S. Army, commanding general of the VII Corps Support Command.
- Philip M. Hannan, the Eleventh archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans.
- John H. Dimond, Alaska Supreme Court justice.
- John F. Geisse, a pioneer of retailing concepts, co-founder of Target Discount Stores, founder of Venture Stores and The Wholesale Club.
- Jeremiah A. O'Leary, USMC veteran, prize-winning journalist, president of the White House Correspondents' Association.
- Robert M. McGovern, Medal of Honor recipient.
- Hugh Everett III, American physicist who first proposed the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics, which he termed his "relative state" formulation.
- Jack George, first chairman and CEO of AOL
- Bobby Lewis, retired NBA player for San Francisco Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers.
- Collis Jones, retired American Basketball Association player.
- Tim Brant, retired sportscaster for Raycom Sports, CBS, and ABC; former VP, Sports for WJLA-TV.
- Stanley McChrystal, retired United States Army general who served as Director of Joint Staff.
- Tom McGrath, Tony-winning Broadway producer.
- Joseph Siravo, actor, director, teacher and producer.
- Joseph Francois,, international economist.
- Karl Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia.
- Raul J. Fernandez,, entrepreneur who founded Proxicom; Vice Chairman of Monumental Sports & Entertainment.
- Kevin Plank, founder and owner of Under Armour, a performance apparel company.
- Notch , hip-hop, R&B, reggae, dancehall and reggaeton artist
- Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, playwright.
- Dwayne Anderson, professional basketball player.
- Marissa Coleman, WNBA player.
- Chris Wright, professional basketball player.
- L.J. Hoes, MLB player
- Nick Howard, MLB player
- James Palmer Jr., basketball player for the Nebraska Cornhuskers.
- Dante Cunningham, NBA player.
- Shane Salerno, screenwriter and producer.
- Ariana Austin Makonnen, princess and member of the Ethiopian Imperial House of Solomon; wife of Prince Joel Dawit Makonnen