Cardinal Spellman High School
Cardinal Spellman High School
Address
738 Court Street

, ,
02302

United States
Coordinates42°5′35.0″N 70°59′35.2″W / 42.093056°N 70.993111°W / 42.093056; -70.993111
Information
TypePrivate, coeducational
MottoSequere Deum
("Follow God")
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1958
AuthorityIndependent
PresidentDaniel Hodes
ChairpersonKevin Kelley
DirectorMatthew Leppanen
Head of schoolAimee Wetzel, Christine Evans
ChaplainJoe Nickley
Faculty52
Grades912
Enrollment500 (2021)
CampusSuburban
Campus size42 Acres
Color(s)Cardinal red and goldenrod   
Athletics conferenceCatholic Central League
SportsFootball, boys'/girls' soccer, boys'/girls' cross country, boys'/girls' golf, girls' volleyball, cheerleading, indoor winter track, boys'/girls' basketball, boys'/girls' swimming, hockey, baseball, softball, spring track, boys'/girls' tennis, lacrosse
MascotThe Cardinal Crazy
Team nameCardinals
RivalArchbishop Williams High School, Abington High School
AccreditationNew England Association of Schools and Colleges[1]
PublicationTradition Magazine
NewspaperThe Daily Cardinal
Tuition$15,900 (2021-22[2])
AffiliationNational Catholic Educational Association
Websitewww.spellman.com

Cardinal Spellman High School is a private college preparatory high school of Catholic denomination established in 1958 and located in Brockton, Massachusetts, United States. Like the school's fellow Catholic school and sports rival, Archbishop Williams High School, Spellman separated from the Boston Archdiocese in the wake of the child sex abuse scandal.[3] The school is named after Cardinal Francis Spellman.[4]

History

Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, officiated at the dedication of Cardinal Spellman High School on October 20, 1958. He blessed its buildings and laid the cornerstone during the ceremony. The school was named in honor of Francis Cardinal Spellman, whose birthplace was in the neighboring town of Whitman, Massachusetts. "Sequere Deum - Follow God" was taken from Francis Cardinal Spellman's coat of arms and used as the school's motto.[5]

In September 1958, 300 students began their school careers as students at Cardinal Spellman with Sister M. Vera, CSJ as the founding Principal and a faculty of ten Sisters of Saint Joseph of Boston. Many Sisters worked at Cardinal Spellman over the years. There are no longer any Sisters of Saint Joseph currently working at Spellman. The last one, Sr. Patricia Lynch, left in July 2012.

On December 6, 1963, Cardinal Spellman High School, along with several other secondary schools in the Archdiocese of Boston, was incorporated as a member of the Archdiocesan Central High Schools, Inc. In 1979, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges awarded Cardinal Spellman High School its initial accreditation; in 1989 and again in 1999, the school was re-accredited for successive ten-year periods. Cardinal Spellman High School was elected as a permanent member of the College Board in 1983. The school is also affiliated with the National Catholic Educational Association.

Cardinal Spellman High School was incorporated in January 2004 after the Board of Trustees of the Archdiocesan Central High Schools, Inc., determined that each of its schools would be best served by becoming an independent public juridic institution governed by its own board of trustees. Beginning on September 1, 2004, Spellman's board of trustees took over the responsibility of governing the school.

Sexual abuse incident

In 2016, The Boston Globe reported that, seven years prior, a Spanish teacher began a sexual relationship with his seventeen-year-old female student. At the time, the student's parents found evidence of the teacher's relationship with their daughter, including a hotel receipt and graphic photos. Spellman fired the teacher after administrators saw the photos. The case brought to light controversy over Massachusetts laws governing age of consent and sexual relationships between teachers and students.[6]

Athletics

Peter Ambrose, a longtime football and baseball coach at Cardinal Spellman, won 628 games in 50 years on the diamond before retiring, making him one of four Massachusetts high school baseball coaches to win 600 games. He also captured 12 Catholic Central League championships and one Eastern Mass.[7] Championship. Coaching football, he won 211 games in 41 years, as well as 12 league titles and one Super Bowl appearance. He retired in 2010.[8]

The fall season in 2011 was particularly impressive for Cardinals sports teams. Spellman won five Catholic Central titles and had a combined record of 79-15-1.[8]

In 2019, Spellman installed its first artificial turf field on Potvin Field.[9]

Titles

Football[10]
YearTitle
1961Catholic Central League Champions
1964Catholic Central League Champions
1968Catholic Central League Champions
1970Catholic Central League Champions
1971Catholic Central League Champions
1974Catholic Central League Champions
1978Catholic Central League Champions
1984Catholic Central League Champions (Super Bowl Finalist)
1992Division 4 Super Bowl Champions
2000Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2010Catholic Central League Champions (Super Bowl Finalist)
2011Catholic Central League Champions (Super Bowl Finalist)
Boys Basketball[10]
YearTitle
1962Catholic Central League Champions
1973Catholic Central League Champions
1984Massachusetts State Champions
1995Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2000Massachusetts South Sectional Champions
2010Catholic Central League Champions
2011Eastern Massachusetts Finalists
2012Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2013Catholic Central League Champions
2014Massachusetts State Champions
Girls Basketball[10]
YearTitle
1979Catholic Central League Champions
1983Catholic Central League Champions
1996Catholic Central League Champions
1998Catholic Central League Champions
1999Catholic Central League Champions
2006Eastern Massachusetts Champions
2007Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2008Catholic Central League Co-Champions
Baseball[10]
YearTitle
1965Catholic Central League Champions
1975Eastern Massachusetts Champions
1976Catholic Central League Champions
1977Catholic Central League Champions
1978Catholic Central League Champions
1988Catholic Central League Champions
1992Catholic Central League Champions
1993Catholic Central League Champions
2006Catholic Central League Champions
2007Catholic Central League Champions
2008Catholic Central League Champions
Softball[10]
YearTitle
1997Massachusetts Division 3 South Sectional Champions
1999Massachusetts Division 3 South Sectional Champions
2000Catholic Central League Champions
2001Massachusetts Division 3 State Champions
2002Catholic Central League Champions
2003Massachusetts Division 2 State Champions
2004Eastern Massachusetts Division 2 Champions
2005Massachusetts Division 2 South Sectional Champions
2007Catholic Central League Champions
2008Catholic Central League Champions
2009Catholic Central League Champions
2010Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2012Catholic Central League Champions
2014Catholic Central League Champions
Girls Soccer[10]
YearTitle
1987Catholic Central League Champions
1988Catholic Central League Champions
1989Catholic Central League Champions
1990Catholic Central League Champions
1993Catholic Central League Champions
2003Catholic Central League Champions
2006Eastern Massachusetts Division 2 Champions
2008Catholic Central League Champions
2009Massachusetts State Champions
2011Catholic Central League Champions
2013Massachusetts Division 3 South Sectional Champions
Boys Soccer[10]
YearTitle
1990Catholic Central League Champions
2004Catholic Central League Champions
2006Catholic Central League Co-Champions
2007Catholic Central League Champions
2008Catholic Central League Champions
2009Massachusetts Division 3 South Champions
2010Catholic Central League Champions
2011Massachusetts Division 3 South Champions
2013Catholic Central League Champions
Volleyball[10]
YearTitle
2008Catholic Central League Champions
2009Catholic Central League Champions
2011Catholic Central League Champions
2017Catholic Central League Champions
2019Catholic Central League Champions
Boys Lacrosse[10]
YearTitle
2016Catholic Central League Champions

Drama

Cardinal Spellman's spring musical production

Spellman is recognized locally for its outstanding drama program. Robert J. McEwan, a longtime teacher at Spellman and chair of the English department for 47 years, established the school's first drama department in 1965, opening the school's first production of The King and I to a full house. McEwan went on to direct 47 musicals and 35 "Spring Shows," annual productions that frequently featured alumni, parents, and teachers as well as students.[11]

Spellman established the Robert J. McEwan Drama Hall of Fame in 1996. Since its inception, it has inducted over 100 alumni, teachers, staff members, parents, and other friends of Spellman, honoring their contributions to the drama program both on and off the stage.[11] Though McEwan died in 2013, his legacy continues through the flourishing drama program that he created. In 2015, the school honored McEwan by dedicating the newly renovated auditorium foyer in his name.[12]

Past Musical Productions
YearMusical
1963The Student Prince
1964Blossom Time
1965The King and I
1966The Sound of Music
1967My Fair Lady
1968The Boyfriend
1969Oklahoma!
1970Carousel
1971Camelot
1972Brigadoon
1973Fiddler on the Roof
1974No, No, Nanette
1975My Fair Lady
1976The Music Man
1977The Sound of Music
1978Carousel
1979Oliver!
1980Camelot
1981My Fair Lady
1982Hello, Dolly!
1983Fiddler on the Roof
1984The Music Man
1985The Sound of Music
1986Oliver!
1987Carousel
1988The King and I
1989Camelot
1990Fiddler on the Roof
1991My Fair Lady
1992The Music Man
1993Brigadoon
1994Fiddler on the Roof
1995Carousel (cancelled)
1996Oliver!
1997Hello, Dolly!
1998The King and I
1999The Boyfriend
2000Carousel
2001My Fair Lady
2002The Sound of Music
2003Fiddler on the Roof
2004Hello, Dolly!
2005Camelot
2006Les Misérables
2007Godspell
2008Beauty and the Beast
2009Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
2010Les Misérables
2011Fiddler on the Roof
2012Godspell
2013Seussical
2014Thoroughly Modern Millie
2015Mary Poppins
2016Bye Bye Birdie
2017Anything Goes
2018Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
2019Seussical
2020Grease (Postponed Until 2021)
2021Godspell
2022Annie
2023TBA

Notable alumni

  • John Altieri – singer and stage actor
  • Paul Antonelli – composer and music director
  • Suzanne M. Bump – current Massachusetts State Auditor and former State Representative and state Secretary of Labor
  • Jane Condon – comedian, winner of Last Comic Standing
  • Hon. Mark Gildea – Massachusetts Superior Court Justice
  • Christine Hurley – comedian
  • Thomas P. Kennedy – former Massachusetts State Representative and State Senator
  • John E. Walsh – former Chairman of the Massachusetts Democratic Party

References

  1. NEASC-CIS. "NEASC-Commission on Independent Schools". Archived from the original on 2009-06-16. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  2. "Home - Cardinal Spellman High School".
  3. "Boston Globe / Spotlight / Abuse in the Catholic Church / The financial cost".
  4. "Explore Cardinal Spellman High School". Niche. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  5. "Explore Cardinal Spellman High School in Brockton, MA". GreatSchools.org. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  6. "Across region, outdated sex abuse laws have loopholes - The Boston Globe". The Boston Globe.
  7. "Cardinal Spellman (Brockton, MA) High School Sports - Football, Basketball, Baseball, Softball, Volleyball, and more | MaxPreps". www.maxpreps.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  8. 1 2 "Cardinal Spellman receives Globe's Nason award - Schools - Boston.com". Archived from the original on 2012-12-31.
  9. "Spellman breaks ground on new turf field! | post".
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Title & Championship History". spellman.com. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  11. 1 2 "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-16. Retrieved 2021-03-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-16. Retrieved 2021-03-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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