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The Catholic Normal School and Pio Nono College, also known as Holy Family Normal School, was a paired institution (sharing the same faculty) in St. Francis, Wisconsin, founded in 1870 by Rev. Dr. Joseph Salzmann as the first Catholic normal school in the United States. The Normal School specialized in training young men in music education, while Pio Nono was a business college. In 1922, Pio Nono became a high school, serving boys in grades nine to 12. The school merged with Don Bosco High School in 1972 to form St. Thomas More High School.
As early as 1864, Rev. Salzmann conceived the idea of founding an institution to prepare young men for the teaching profession. He launched the project to build Catholic Normal School and Pio Nono College. On June 12, 1870, the cornerstone for this school was laid. The college was named for Pius IX, who was pope at the time.
The school’s primary focus was music, since the office of an organist and choirmaster was frequently combined with that of teacher. In 1873, Professor Johann Baptist Singenberger arrived from Germany to head the music program. Throughout its early years, Pio Nono was recognized as the chief exponent of Catholic church music in the United States.
In 1922, the “normal school/college” department was dissolved and Pio Nono became exclusively a Catholic boarding and day high school for boys. Salzmann Hall was built in 1931 to accommodate the growing numbers of students, and this building still stands today as part of St. Thomas More High School.
In 1941, Pio Nono was turned into a minor seminary known as St. Francis Minor Seminary. Serving both day and boarding students, the minor seminary consisted of four years of high school and two years of college. St. Francis Minor Seminary continued to educate young men at Pio Nono's former location until de Sales Preparatory Seminary was dedicated in 1963.
Under the leadership of Rev. Edmund Olley, Pio Nono reopened in 1965 in the building previously occupied by St. Francis Minor Seminary, and plans for a new building addition were created. The “resurrection” of Pio Nono began with a freshman class of 100, and a new class was added each year, with the first senior class graduating in 1969.
This revival was short-lived, however. Because of declining enrollment in Catholic high schools on Milwaukee's south side, in 1972, Pio Nono merged with Don Bosco High School to form St. Thomas More High School. This new school continued to educate young men in the building previously occupied by Pio Nono. [1]
St. John's School for the Deaf was founded as part of Pio Nono in 1876 as the Catholic Deaf and Dumb Asylum. In its first year, the 17 students classes were held in the second floor of the Pio Nono gymnasium. A separate building for the school was completed in the summer of 1879 and dedicated in December of that year. From 1889-1895 it operated as the coeducational St. John's Institute for Deaf Mutes. In 1895, the institute became a fully independent school, and was no longer an entity within Pio Nono College. [2] [3]
The Archdiocese of Milwaukee is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or archdiocese, of the Catholic Church in southeast Wisconsin in the United States.
Francis de Sales, C.O., O.M. was a Savoyard Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Geneva and is a saint of the Catholic Church. He became noted for his deep faith and his gentle approach to the religious divisions in his land resulting from the Protestant Reformation. He is known also for his writings on the topic of spiritual direction and spiritual formation, particularly the Introduction to the Devout Life and the Treatise on the Love of God.
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St. John's School for the Deaf was a Roman Catholic school for deaf children located in St. Francis, Wisconsin. Founded in 1876, the school served children from preschool through twelfth grade before closing in 1983. St. John became most famous for being the site of possibly upwards of 200 molestations at the hands of priest and serial child molester Lawrence C. Murphy who was on staff from 1950 until 1974.
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