This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (June 2017) |
Brother Martin High School is a private, Catholic, all-boys college preparatory school run by the United States Province of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans.
Brother Martin High School | |
---|---|
Location | |
, , Louisiana 70122 U.S. | |
Coordinates | 30°0′13″N 90°3′32″W / 30.00361°N 90.05889°W |
Information | |
Former names |
|
School type | Private, college-preparatory school |
Motto | Latin: Ametur Cor Jesu! Ametur Cor Mariae! English: Loved be the heart of Jesus! Loved be the heart of Mary! |
Religious affiliation(s) | |
Established | 1869 |
Founder | Archbishop Jean-Marie Odin |
President | Gregory M. Rando |
Principal | Ryan J. Gallagher |
Grades | 8–12 |
Gender | Boys |
Enrollment | 1100+ |
Color(s) | Crimson and gold |
Athletics conference | New Orleans Catholic League (District 9-5A) |
Sports |
|
Mascot | Crusader |
Nickname | Crusaders |
Rival | St. Augustine Purple Knights Holy Cross Tigers Jesuit Blue Jays |
Accreditation | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools[1] |
Publication | The Pen And The Sword (literary magazine) |
Yearbook | Yesterday |
Tuition | $11,838 + $650 fees = $12,488 total (2023-24) |
Affiliations | |
Website | brothermartin |
History
editThe school was founded by the brothers in 1869 as St. Aloysius College. Another high school, Cor Jesu High School, was later merged into the school, which later took on its current name.
Hurricane Katrina
editHurricane Katrina forced the school to close in August 2005. Brother Martin opened a temporary facility at Catholic High School in Baton Rouge for their students. Catholic High allowed students and faculty of Brother Martin to use their facilities during its after hours. Displaced Brother Martin students continued to learn here for the remainder of 2005. Brother Martin High School reopened its doors in New Orleans in January 2006 sustaining minimal flood damage to the bottom floors. Many faculty and volunteers helped renovate and repair the damaged sections of the school.
School mascot and colors
editThe school's mascot is a crusader and the colors are crimson and gold.
Campus
editBrother Martin High School is located on Elysian Fields Avenue in Gentilly, an established residential neighborhood in New Orleans. The school campus includes Cor Jesu Hall, the oldest building on the current campus; built in 1954, the Conlin Gymnasium (now fully air-conditioned), the largest high school gym in the city, and the newest components on campus; the Thomas F. and Elaine P. Ridgley Fine Arts and Athletic Center, commonly known as the "Ridgley Center", E. A. Farley Field, used for Soccer, Baseball and non-varsity football, the Roland H. & Macy Paton Meyer Science and Mathematics Building, and the James B. Branton Chapel. Renovations were also made to the Cor Jesu building, second-floor resource center, Library, Benson Mall, and Food Services.
Thomas F. and Elaine P. Ridgley Fine Arts and Athletic Center
editIn January 1999, over 400 alumni, Brothers and friends attended the dedication ceremony for the Thomas F. and Elaine P. Ridgley Fine Arts and Athletic Center. The dedication of this 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) facility was presided over by Bishop Gregory Aymond, CJ’67, hosted by Brother Ivy LeBlanc, S.C. President of Brother Martin High School and was the realization of the goal of the first phase of the Campaign for Brother Martin High School. The entrance to the Ridgley Center Lobby is on a diagonal. The diagonal sits on the Faubourg-Darcantel line, one of the oldest boundaries in the city. Upstairs in the second floor lobby, a wall of windows frame E.A. Farley Field.
E. A. Farley Field
editBetween 1945 and 1947 the Brothers of the Sacred Heart, looking toward the future had purchased more than 7 acres (28,000 m2) of property, primarily from the Farley family, in the growing residential area of Gentilly. By 1952 Brother Martin Hernandez as provincial planned and supervised the construction of Cor Jesu High School on the Gentilly site. Through his Youth Progress Program Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel contributed $475,000 toward construction and furnishings of the new school.
From 1980 through 1983 the school purchased parcels of land from the Farley Family which was bordered by Mandeville Street, Gentilly Boulevard, St. Aloysius Drive (formerly Stephen Girard St.) and Cor Jesu Drive (formerly Marigny St.) for use in their athletic and extracurricular programs.
The field underwent a renovation as part of Phase II of the Capital Campaign during which a baseball field was constructed and additional athletic storage and restrooms were added. The playing surface was redone and drainage and a sprinkler system were installed, allowing the lower level teams to play home games on campus, although the varsity plays its home games at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium at nearby Delgado Community College. This is especially where the football team practices. And also the baseball teams.
Roland H. & Macy Paton Meyer Science and Mathematics Building
editThe Roland H. & Macy Paton Meyer Science and Mathematics Building opened for the 2007–2008 school year on August 17. The Meyer Building is located at the corner of Elysian Fields Avenue and Sumpter Street, the former site of the Brothers’ Residence (circa 1955). This 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) building houses computer, chemistry, physics and biology labs. For flexibility, eight science classrooms adjoin the three state-of-the-art lab spaces on the second floor. The first floor has seven math classrooms and a computer lab.
The James B. Branton Chapel
editThe James B. Branton chapel is settled in front of the Roland H. & Macy Paton Meyer Science and Mathematics Building.
Academics
editBrother Martin High School is fully accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. The school offers college- preparatory classes to young men in grades 8–12.
There is a program specially designed for eighth grade. Eighth grade students are required to carry a minimum of six courses. The Placement Committee will place students into the appropriate level of English, math and science. An eighth grade student who fails any subject during the regular school session must successfully complete remedial work in the subject area at Brother Martin summer session before he may advance to the freshman year at Brother Martin. It also provides a curriculum designed to develop skills and create options for higher education. Eighth grade students are required to carry a minimum of six courses including Religion 8, English 8 or English 1 honors, Introduction to Algebra, Algebra 1 or Algebra 1 honors, computer application, earth science, physical science or physical science honors, world geography and honors, health/PE, Fine Arts Survey, and electives.
To graduate, students must earn a minimum of 24 credits. Each course is equal to one credit. Freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are required to carry and successfully complete all required courses and a minimum of six credits each year, seniors must carry and complete all required courses and a minimum of five credits.
Students enrolled in all four honor courses during their sophomore year are invited into the Honors Program. A student that is participating in the Honors Program will be required to continue taking honors or advanced placement courses in English, math, science, and social studies. In addition, a student must also complete three consecutive credits of the same foreign language. The successful participation of a student in the Honors Program earns him an honors diploma at graduation.
School organization and administration
editThe official governing body of Brother Martin High School is the school's board of directors, which is responsible for setting school policy and regulations and hiring the school president and principal. The administration of Brother Martin is a president, the principal, dean of students, assistant principal for academics, assistant principal for admissions, and assistant principal for student services.
Athletics
editBrother Martin is a member of the Louisiana High School Athletic Association and participates in District 9-5A, also known as the Catholic League for the number of Catholic schools in the district.
Brother Martin athletics started back in the early 1900s with basketball and baseball. Now over 100 years later, Brother Martin has more than 12 varsity sports for students to choose from. Brother Martin's years of athletic traditions have yielded numerous State and District Championships over the years. The school has teams in baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, football, golf, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and wrestling- which is regarded as one of the best wrestling programs in the state, with 21 state championship titles since 1979. All teams except tennis, swimming, golf wrestling, and bowling consist of four levels of competition: eighth grade, ninth grade, junior varsity and varsity. The school has had a bowling team as a club sport for many years, but in the 2007–08 school year, it came out with a varsity bowling team. The team competes as a member of the LHSAA. Teams are selected through a tryout process.
Brother Martin's basketball teams won state championships in three of its first five seasons following the merger of St. Aloysius and Cor Jesu. The 1969–70 team went 36–0 and was named a mythical national champion. In 1974, the Crusaders defeated the Catholic League rival Holy Cross in the championship game, led by the future University of Kentucky and NBA player Rick Robey.
Coaches
editThe Crusader football team was coached for 27 seasons (1970–96) by Bobby Conlin, who compiled a 204–99–5 record, the most wins for any Catholic League coach, and the most for any New Orleans-area coach in Louisiana's highest classification. He led Brother Martin to the 1971 Class AAAA state championship with a 23–0 victory over archrival St. Augustine. The Crusaders also reached the championship game in 1989, losing 35–7 to Ouachita Parish. Conlin was posthumously inducted into the LHSAA Hall of Fame in 2003.
Championships
editThis section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience.(June 2024) |
National championships
- (1) Basketball
State championships
- (2) Baseball
- (6) Basketball
- (6) Bowling
- (8) Cross Country
- (1) Football
- (1) Golf
- (2) Soccer
- (2) Tennis
- (21) Wrestling
All championships
Baseball
- 1974-1975 - District, State Runner-up
- 1983-1984 - State
- 1984-1985 - State Runner-up
- 1988-1989 - District Tournament
- 1990-1991 - District
- 1995-1996 - State
- 2007-2008 - District
- 2009-2010 - District
- 2012-2013 - Undefeated District, State Quarterfinalist
- 2013-2014 - District, State Quarterfinalist
- 2014-2015 - State Semifinalist
- 2018-2019 - District, State Semifinalist
In addition to the listed school championships, the 1983 American Legion baseball team sponsored by Brother Martin won the Louisiana state championship and Mid-South regional and placed fourth at the American Legion World Series.
Basketball
- 1969-1970 - District, State, National
- 1970-1971 - District, State
- 1972-1973 - District
- 1973-1974 - District, State
- 1978-1979 - District
- 1982-1983 - District Runner-up; State Semifinalist
- 1986-1987 - District
- 2002-2003 - District, State Runner-up
- 2003-2004 - District, State
- 2004-2005 - District, State
- 2006-2007 - District
- 2009-2010 - State
- 2011-2012 - District, State Semifinalist
- 2012-2013 - State Quarterfinalist
- 2016-2017 - District, State Runner-up
- 2017-2018 - State Quarterfinalist
- 2018-2019 - State Semifinalist
- 2019-2020 - State Semifinalist
Bowling
- 1973-1974 - City
- 1977-1978 - City
- 1987-1988 - City
- 1988-1989 - City
- 1991-1992 - City
- 1994-1995 - City
- 1997-1998 - City
- 2008-2009 - State Runner-up
- 2009-2010 - Bi-Regional
- 2010-2011 - State Runner-up
- 2013-2014 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State Semifinalist
- 2014-2015 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State
- 2015-2016 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State
- 2016-2017 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State Semifinalist
- 2017-2018 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State
- 2018-2019 - Undefeated District, Bi-Regional, State
- 2019-2020 - Undefeated District (Regional and State canceled due to COVID closure)
- 2020-2021 - District, Bi-Regional, State
- 2022-2023 - State
Cross Country
- 1969-1970 - City
- 1970-1971 - City, District
- 1971-1972 - City, District, State
- 1972-1973 - City, District, State Runner-up
- 1973-1974 - City, District
- 1974-1975 - City, District
- 1975-1976 - City, District
- 1976-1977 - City, District
- 1977-1978 - City, District
- 1978-1979 - City, District
- 1979-1980 - City, District, State Runner-up
- 1980-1981 - City, District, State
- 1981-1982 - City, District, State
- 1983-1984 - City
- 1984-1985 - City, State Runner-up
- 1986-1987 - City
- 1991-1992 - City, District, State Runner-up
- 1992-1993 - City, District, State Runner-up
- 1993-1994 - State
- 1994-1995 - City, District, State Runner-up
- 1995-1996 - City, District
- 1997-1998 - State Runner-up
- 1998-1999 - State
- 1999-2000 - District, State
- 2000-2001 - City, District
- 2001-2002 - City
- 2002-2003 - City, District, State
- 2003-2004 - City, State Runner-up
- 2004-2005 - City, State Runner-up
- 2005-2006 - City, State Runner-up
- 2006-2007 - City
- 2007-2008 - City, State
- 2008-2009 - City
- 2011-2012 - District, Metro, State Runner-Up
- 2012-2013 - District Runner-Up, Metro
- 2014-2015- State Runner-Up
- 2015-2016- Metro
- 2016-2017 - District, Region
- 2017-2018 - District, Region
- 2018-2019 - District, Region, State Runner-Up
- 2019-2020 - District, Region
Football
- 1969-1970 - Miracle Strip Bowl
- 1971-1972 - District, State
- 1972-1973 - District
- 1975-1976 - Shrimp Bowl
- 1977-1978 - District
- 1978-1979 - Turkey Bowl
- 1983-1984 - District
- 1985-1986 - District
- 1989-1990 - State Runner-up
- 1992-1993 - District
- 2007-2008 - District
- 2008-2009 - District
- 2014-2015 - State Semifinalist
- 2018-2019 - State Quarterfinalist
- 2019-2020 - State Semifinalist
- 2020-2021 - District (Undefeated), State Semifinalist
- 2022-2022 - State Runner-up
Golf
- 1969-1970 - District
- 1970-1971 - District
- 1971-1972 - City
- 1976-1977 - District, Regional
- 1985-1986 - District
- 1988-1989 - District, Regional
- 1992-1993 - Regional
- 1993-1994 - Regional
- 1995-1996 - Regional
- 2001-2002 - District, Regional
- 2003-2004 - State
- 2006-2007 - District, Regional
- 2012-2013 - District
- 2018-2019 - District
- 2022-2023 - District
Soccer
- 1992-1993 - District
- 1997-1998 - District
- 1999-2000 - State
- 2000-2001 - State
- 2001-2002 - State Runner-up
- 2011-2012 - Co-District
- 2012-2013 - Co- District, State Semifinalist
- 2013-2014 - Undefeated District, State Quarterfinalist
- 2014-2015 - State Quarterfinalist
- 2016-2017 - District
- 2019-2020 - District, State Quarterfinalist
Swimming
- 1987-1988 - District, State Runner-up
- 1988-1989 - District, State Runner-up
- 1994-1995 - State Runner-up
- 1995-1996 - State Runner-up
Tennis
- 1977-1978 - City
- 1984-1985 - State Runner-up
- 1985-1986 - City, District
- 1986-1987 - City, District, State
- 1987-1988 - State Runner-up
- 2011-2012 - Regional Doubles, Regional Runner-up
- 2012-2013 - District Runner-up, Regional Runner-up
- 2013-2014 - District Runner-up, Regional Runner-up
- 2014-2015 - District Runner-up, Regional Runner-up
- 2015-2016 - District Runner-up, Regional Runner-up
- 2016-2017 - Regional Singles, Regional Runner-up
- 2017-2018 - District and Regional Champions, State Runner-up
- 2018-2019 - District and Regional Champions, State Runner-up
- 2023-2024 - City, District, State
Track and Field
- 1971-1972 - District
- 1972-1973 - District
- 1975-1976 - District
- 1978-1979 - District
- 1979-1980 - District
- 1982-1983 - District
- 1983-1984 - District
- 1984-1985 - District
- 1986-1987 - District
- 1990-1991 - Indoor State Runner-up
- 1994-1995 - Indoor State Runner-up
- 1995-1996 - Regional
- 1996-1997 - Regional
- 2003-2004 - District, Regional
- 2005-2006 - District, Regional
- 2007-2008 - District, Regional
- 2008-2009 - District, Regional
- 2011-2012 - District
- 2012-2013 - District
- 2013-2014 - District
- 2014-2015 - District
Wrestling
- 1977-1978 – District, State Runner-up
- 1978-1979 – City, State
- 1980-1981 – State Runner-up
- 1981-1982 – City, State
- 1982-1983 – District, State Runner-up
- 1983-1984 – City, State
- 1984-1985 – District, State
- 1985-1986 – District, State
- 1986-1987 – District, State
- 1989-1990 – District
- 1995-1996 – District, Regional, State Runner-up
- 1996-1997 – District, State Runner-up
- 1998-1999 – District, State
- 1999-2000 – District, State
- 2000-2001 – District, State
- 2001-2002 – District, State
- 2002-2003 – District, State
- 2005-2006 – State Runner-up
- 2006-2007 – District, State
- 2011-2012 – District, State
- 2012-2013 – District, City, State
- 2013-2014 – Undefeated District, State
- 2014-2015- District, State
- 2015-2016- District, State
- 2017-2018 - District, Regional, State
- 2018-2019 - District, State
- 2019-2020 - District, State
- 2021-2022 - Undefeated District, State
- 2022-2023 - Undefeated District
Extracurricular activities
editSome extracurricular activities offered include Academic Games, art and design club, book club, Bands- Marching, Concert, and Symphonic Bands, a pep and stage band, cheerleading, chorus, CSPN (Crusader Streaming & Programming Network), Culinary Crusaders, Close-Up, cyber patriot, drama club, Excalibur National Honor Society, fishing club, intramurals, Key Club, lacrosse, a literary magazine (The Pen and the Sword), literary rally, martial arts medical support staff, Mu Alpha Theta, National Honor Society, National Junior Honor Society, NJROTC, quiz bowl team, rugby team, speech and debate club, student ambassadors, student ministry, student recruiting team, student council, tabletop gaming club, ultimate frisbee, world culture club, and yearbook (Yesterday).
Notable alumni
editThis article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (August 2018) |
NOTE: Some of those listed below graduated from one of Brother Martin's forerunner schools, St. Aloysius (1869–1969) and Cor Jesu (1954–69)
- D. J. Augustin — basketball player for the Orlando Magic, former University of Texas point guard, and 9th overall pick in the 2008 NBA draft
- Gregory Aymond — current Archbishop of New Orleans
- Kevin Belton — celebrity TV chef on PBS, author and New Orleans cooking instructor. Played football at Brother Martin, LSU and the San Diego Chargers training camp.
- Tom Benson — owner of the New Orleans Saints & New Orleans Pelicans (died 2018)
- Zeke Bonura — former MLB player (Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs)
- Ken Bordelon — former NFL linebacker (New Orleans Saints); co-captain of Brother Martin's 1971 Class AAAA state championship team
- Richard Brennan Sr. (1931–2015) — New Orleans restaurateur, owned the Commander's Palace[2]
- Pascal F. Calogero Jr. — Chief Justice, Louisiana Supreme Court (retired)
- Garret Chachere — college football coach
- Philip Ciaccio — state representative, New Orleans City Council member, state circuit judge from 1982 to 1998[3]
- Fernando del Valle (born Brian Stephen Skinner) — operatic tenor
- Allen J. Ellender — United States Senator, 19was President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate as well as Dean of the Senate
- Greer Grimsley — Bass-Baritone
- Juan LaFonta — Louisiana State Representative, District 96
- Joseph N. Macaluso Sr. Ph.D — Col. USAR (retired), Prof Emeritus, Our Lady of Holy Cross College, St. Aloysius band member (1941-1945) under Prof. Taverna
- Warde Manuel — Athletic Director, University of Michigan. Former defensive tackle for the Wolverines football team. Is a member of the College Football Playoff Selection Committee.[4]
- Chito Martínez — former MLB player (Baltimore Orioles)
- Paul Meany — lead singer of band Mutemath
- Stanton Moore — drummer of New Orleans band Galactic
- Robert William Muench — Bishop of the Diocese of Baton Rouge
- Don Newman — member of Brother Martin's 1974 state basketball champion team; NBA assistant coach, including World Champion San Antonio Spurs in 2005 & 2007
- Arthur J. O'Keefe — former mayor of New Orleans (1926–1929)
- Michael D. Perry, software engineer, photographer and writer
- Rick Robey — basketball player, member of Brother Martin's 1974 state champions, 1978 NCAA champion Kentucky Wildcats and 1981 NBA Champion Boston Celtics
- Edward Scheidt — retired Chairman of the CIA Cryptographic Center
- Richard Simmons — fitness guru and celebrity
- Eric F. Skrmetta — Commissioner, Louisiana Public Service Commission
- Irv Smith Jr. — free-agent tight end, formerly a player for the Vikings, Bengals, and Chiefs
- Will Clapp — current offensive lineman for Los Angeles Chargers
- Tre' Morgan — current minor league baseball player and former 2023 National Champion for LSU Tigers
References
edit- ^ "Cognia - Institution Summary". Cognia. Retrieved 2020-10-21 – via advanc-ed.org.
- ^ David Lee Simmons; Todd A. Price (March 15, 2015). "Dick Brennan Sr., New Orleans restaurateur, has died at age 83". New Orleans Times-Picayune. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
- ^ "Philip Charles Ciaccio". New Orleans Times-Picayune. Retrieved November 14, 2015.
- ^ "2024-25 Selection Committee Roster".