Fenwick High School | |
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Address | |
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505 Washington Boulevard , 60302 United States | |
Coordinates | 41°52′52″N87°47′19″W / 41.881°N 87.7886°W |
Information | |
Type | Private secondary |
Motto | Veritas |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Opened | 1929 |
Oversight | Archdiocese of Chicago |
President | Otto Rutt |
Principal | John Finan |
Teaching staff | 87.4 (on an FTE basis) [1] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1,101 [1] (2021–22) |
Student to teacher ratio | 12.6 [1] |
Campus | Large suburb [1] |
Color(s) | Black and white |
Athletics conference | Chicago Catholic League & Girls Catholic Athletic Conference |
Nickname | Friars |
Publication | Touchstone |
Newspaper | The Wick |
Yearbook | Blackfriars Yearbook |
Affiliation | Dominicans |
Website | fenwickfriars |
Fenwick High School is a private Catholic college preparatory school located in Oak Park, a town in Cook County, Illinois that is bordered by Chicago on the north, east, River Forest and Forest Park on the West, and Cicero and Berwyn on the south. Fenwick was founded in 1929 [2] and is a ministry of the Province of St. Albert the Great (Dominican Friars). It is the only school directly operated and staffed by the Order of Preachers (Dominican friars) in the United States. [3] It is named in honor of the first Bishop of Cincinnati, Dominican friar Edward Dominic Fenwick, O.P..
Retired Marine Corps Col. Otto J. Rutt, a Harvard University graduate and Fenwick alumnus, became the school's first lay president in November 2024. [4] [5]
Fenwick High School was founded as an all-boys college preparatory high school in 1929 by the Catholic Order of Dominican Fathers and Brothers of the Province of St. Joseph. Since its founding, Fenwick has maintained a strict dress code which includes slacks, dress shirts and ties for the boys and plaid skirts for the girls. During assemblies, all students are required to wear blazers and boys are additionally required to wear ties. Fenwick was originally intended to be a prep school for matriculation to the University of Notre Dame in the Midwest and Georgetown University on the East Coast, similar to Phillips Academy Andover's matriculation to Yale, Portsmouth Abbey School's matriculation to Fordham University and Boston College and Phillips Exeter Academy's matriculation to Harvard. Today, Fenwick's students matriculate to many top American and international universities. [6] In 1939, the St. Joseph Province was divided and Fenwick High School became part of the new Province of St. Albert the Great, with headquarters in Chicago. Fenwick became coeducational in 1992, rather than raise tuition costs or see enrollment decline. [7] Fenwick's first coeducational graduating class, was led by valedictorian, Bridgid Esposito, one of the few females in her class. Today, Fenwick is known as a secondary school. Students have access to many athletic facilities, including a baseball field, two football fields, a softball diamond, a pool, and a soccer field on the campus of Fenwick's Dominican Priory in the nearby suburb of River Forest.
Since its founding, Fenwick has maintained a 100% college matriculation rate. [8]
In 1983, Fenwick was selected by the U.S. Department of Education as a Blue Ribbon School. [9] On January 18, 1999, U.S. News & World Report classified Fenwick as an "Outstanding American High School", making Fenwick tied for the #1 ranked preparatory school in the Chicago area. [8] For 2009, Fenwick's 290 student class had 211 of them receive 718 academic scholarships to top universities around the country with the monetary value of these awards in excess of $16,000,000 (up from $13,900,000 in 2007–2008, $12,555,800 in 2006–2007 and 9,370,000 in 2005–2006). The 2009 graduating class also boasted 187 Presidential Scholars and 30 National Merit Finalists, with 22 additional receiving commendation for being named to the top 5% in the nation. [10] Fenwick's 2010–2011 class achieved $40,000,000 in merit based scholarships. [11] As of 2025, Fenwick is currently ranked in the top 5 Catholic high schools in Illinois.
Around the time Fenwick started admitting girls, there was a proposal to officially move classes to the school's priory in River Forest, or construct a brand new school in collaboration with nearby Trinity High School, its all-girls counterpart run by the Dominican Sisters. [3] The idea almost passed, but was dropped when Fenwick insisted on maintaining complete control over the standards of the new school. Instead, Fenwick has commenced several expansion campaigns at their present location in Oak Park based around their original neo-Gothic designed school created by the New York architect Wilfred E. Anthony, who also redesigned the Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Indiana for the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. [12] The latest expansions include: a new field house with a 1,100-seat gymnasium and a 450-seat natatorium; several new classrooms and updated athletic lockers; a new school entrance and gateway inspired by the Arch at Northwestern University; and additional science laboratories and art studios, all of which are in keeping with the original Neo-Gothic look of Fenwick's school and priory. [13]
Fenwick is the only high school in the United States owned and operated by the Dominican Order. [3]
The first sentence of the school's philosophy statement, defines the school as a "college preparatory high school". [14] Students are required to study four years of theology, English, mathematics, and a foreign language in order to graduate. [15]
As a part of the third-year theology course, students are required to plan and conduct a "Christian Service Project". The project requires a minimum of thirty hours of service, no more than 20 of which may be completed prior to the start of the student's junior year. [16]
The school offers AP Calculus BC, and gives students the option to take either the "AB" or "BC" test at the end of the year. Beyond AP Calculus, the school offers courses in multivariable calculus, linear algebra and differential equations. [17]
The Fenwick Friars compete in two conferences. Male teams compete in the Chicago Catholic League (CCL), while the female teams compete in the East Suburban Catholic Conference. The school competes in state championship series sponsored by the Illinois High School Association (IHSA).
Prior to the institution of a state playoff system for football in the 1970s, Fenwick competed to play in the Prep Bowl, which pitted the champions of the CCL against the champion of the Chicago Public League. Fenwick won two Prep Bowl titles at the game's usual home of Soldier Field. The first was in 1945, when a crowd of 80,000 fans saw Fenwick defeat Tilden High School, 20–6. The second was in 1962, and saw Fenwick defeat Schurz High School, 40–0. The win not only capped an undefeated season, but was played before over 91,000 fans; the third-largest crowd to witness a high school football game in Illinois history. The 1945 game is tied for seventh in terms of crowd size. [18] The Prep Bowl has continued as a separate competition since the introduction of the statewide playoff, for teams which do not make those playoffs or are eliminated early, and Fenwick has won it in 1991 and 2010. [19]
Sports Illustrated has added Fenwick to its list of the "50 Best High School Athletic Programs in the Country", recognizing Fenwick as having the best athletic program in Illinois. [20] Fenwick's 2006–2007 swimming and swim/polo teams produced 12 NISCA Academic All-American athletes. [21] [22] For 2009, two state championships were achieved in water polo, 11 regional, sectional or supersectional championships were earned, along with 15 conference titles. There were also 17 All-State athletes, 19 All-American athletes and 12 All-Academic athletes named. Five students were granted NCAA athletic scholarships. [23]
Fenwick's academic teams are also highly competitive. The Math Team was state champion in 2002, in large part to the great teaching of Roger Finnell, a teacher there for 50 years now, [24] and has also been the highest scoring private school in the AA Division for 14 years in a row. [25] 2009 marks the 16th consecutive year for Fenwick's Math Team to qualify for state. [6]
The Wick (school newspaper), The Blackfriars Yearbook, and the Touchstone (literary magazine), have all been recognized with awards by the American Scholastic Press Association. The 2006–2007 edition of Touchstone was awarded first place with special honors by the American Scholastic Press Association, placing Fenwick's publication at the top 5% of all high school literary publications in the country. Touchstone has earned 970/1000 possible points by the American Scholastic Press Association, thereby allowing it to be a contender for the "Most Outstanding High School Literary and Art Magazine". [6] [26]
![]() | This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy.(September 2017) |
This article's citations lack bibliographical information.(November 2018) |
It was revealed earlier today that Hirsch also talked with UCLA Assistant Coach John Jardine ... Before that, he coached at Fenwick High School in Oak Park, Ill. and compiled a 51–6–1 record ...[ dead link ]