The Aquinas Institute of Rochester

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The Aquinas Institute of Rochester
The Aquinas Institute Logo.jpg
Address
The Aquinas Institute of Rochester
1127 Dewey Avenue

, ,
14613

United States
Coordinates 43°11′15″N77°38′23″W / 43.18750°N 77.63972°W / 43.18750; -77.63972
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
MottoCredo Quid Quid Dixit Dei Filius.
(I believe whatever the son of God has said)
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic, Basilian
Established1902;121 years ago (1902)
PresidentAnthony Cook
PrincipalTheodore Mancini '88
Staff51
Faculty68
Grades 6-12
Average class size25
Student to teacher ratio15:1
Color(s) Maroon and White   
MascotLi'l Irish
Rival McQuaid Jesuit High School
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools [1]
NewspaperMaroon & White
YearbookArete
Endowment~$22 Million
Tuition$10,300 (Grades 9-11); $7,600 (Grades 6–8)
Alumni19,000+
Website aquinasinstitute.com
The Aquinas Institute of Rochester
Area13 acres (5.3 ha)
ArchitectJ. Foster Warner
Architectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Italian Renaissance
NRHP reference No. 89000464 [2]
Added to NRHPJune 8, 1989

The Aquinas Institute of Rochester is a co-educational Catholic school in Rochester, New York established in 1902. Although The Aquinas Institute was founded as an all-male high school, it opened to female students in 1982. It is located within City of Rochester. It has stood at its current location on Dewey Avenue since 1925. Over 18,000 have graduated since the school opening.

Contents

Buildings on campus

The main school building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Wegman – Napier Building, an extension of the main school building, houses science labs for biology and chemistry classes, as well as a renovated gym. Aquinas' biology labs were refurbished in 2007, and a 30,000 sq ft (2,800 m2) field house was built in 2008.

Aquinas constructed an on-campus stadium in 2005, sponsored by and named the Wegmans Sports Complex. The new stadium was built twenty years after its previous football stadium Holleder Memorial Stadium was demolished in 1985.

Notable alumni

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