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ResQgeek

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About a month ago, I joined a few of my high school classmates at the annual reunion dinner at our school, to celebrate the 25th anniversary of our graduation (Really? 25 years already? Doesn’t seem possible…). Our school, known then as Archbishop Walsh High School (and today as Archbishop Walsh Academy), is and was a small Catholic school serving the rural communities of western New York near the state line with Pennsylvania. For me, it was an essential escape from a toxic peer group at my local public school, and provided me with a much needed fresh start during my adolescence. My four years in that school were important in my personal development and I have (mostly) fond memories from that period.

However, as important as that school was to me, I never really gave much thought to the name. So when it came up during a conversation at the reunion, it got me wondering…Who the heck was Archbishop Walsh, and why was our school named after him? Somehow it seemed wrong that we should all have graduated from the school without knowing at least a little bit about the schools namesake.

Well, that question has bugged me for a month, so I did some research. Turns out that Archbishop Thomas J. Walsh was the first archbishop of Newark, from 1937 until his death in 1952. It seems that he was a big advocate for Catholic education, and expressed a preference for school construction over church construction. This much seemed to be at least vaguely known by at least some of the alumni at the reunion. But his connections to our school are actually deeper than that.

Thomas Walsh was born in Pennsylvania in 1873, but grew up in Wellsville, NY (about 30 miles from the school and one of the communities that was served by it), and studied at St. Bonaventure College (now St. Bonaventure University, operated by the Franciscan Order of Friars Minor), only a little more than a mile from our school. When Archbishop Walsh High School opened, the original faculty included Friars from St. Bonaventure as well as nuns from the nearby Motherhouse of the Order of St. Francis. I suspect that this connection with St. Bonaventure also played a role in the naming of the new school when it was founded in 1959.

After being ordained as a priest, Fr. Walsh served as Chancellor for the Diocese of Buffalo (which built and operated the school until the 1990s) before he was appointed Bishop of Trenton. This gives us a third and final link between the Archbishop and the school that uses his name. While his support for Catholic education would have been a sufficient reason to name a school after him, the local connections are the more satisfying for me.

Class reunion

Aug. 7th, 2006 08:01 am
resqgeek: (Default)
It still surprises me, but its been twenty years since I graduated high school, which means I've been out of high school longer than I had been alive when I finished! Looking back on my four years of high school, I have lots of fond memories (with a handful of not so pleasant ones mixed in). High school was an important transitional period in my life, and I can still feel the impact of my choices and experiences from that period. As a result, I was looking forward to my 20-year class reunion.

Five years ago, I was the only member of my class to attend the annual reunion events hosted by my high school. Granted, fifteen years isn't generally perceived as a milestone year, but since almost two-thirds of my class still lives within 60 miles of where we went to school, I would have expected at least a few to show up.

Hoping to prevent a repeat of this embarrassing situation, I started contacting class members earlier this year, hoping to encourage people to attend this year's reunion. Unfortunately, I was only partially successful. Only three other classmates attended the reunion dinner/dance on Friday night. I was disappointed by the numbers, but still had a good time catching up with those who were in attendance. We shared news about each other and the other members of the class that we've heard from. All-in-all, it was fun, but I've already decided to start trying to build interest in our quarter century reunion in five years...
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