Mercy High School (Red Bluff, California)

Mercy High School is a private, Roman Catholic high school in Red Bluff, California. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento.

Mercy High School
Address
233 Riverside Way

Red Bluff

, ,
96080

United States
Coordinates40°10′27″N 122°13′50″W
Information
TypePrivate
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1882
FounderSisters of Mercy
School district(sacred heart school district)
OversightDiocese of Sacramento
PresidentMr. Weber
Grades9-12
GenderCoeducational
Color(s)Navy and White         
Team nameWarriors
AccreditationWestern Association of Schools and Colleges[1]
Tuition$8,100 (2009-2010)
Dean of StudentsEileen Bauer
Athletic DirectorBrian Medeiros
Websitehttp://www.mercy-high.org

Background

Mercy High School was established in 1882 as Our Lady of Mercy Academy by the Sisters of Mercy. It became Mercy High School when it moved to its present location in 1959.

[2] Mercy has a long history of great sports and academics.

In 2020 it was scheduled to close; however a plan was proposed in which the school would remain as a distance learning school where students access courses via computer from their local parishes.[3]

gollark: It might be fun to use Codex to make that AI shell thing someone had.
gollark: They might struggle to write *idiomatic* Haskell.
gollark: I sort of know it, or at least can write reasonably working code in it even if I don't have an intuitive grasp of the weird underlying category theory stuff, but it's really annoying to do the sort of things my code usually involves in it. It's great for stuff like compilers and complex algorithms at least.
gollark: Haskell is very useful if you need to comonadize a zygohistomorphic prepromorphism.
gollark: Something about "explore-exploit tradeoffs".

References

  1. WASC-ACS. "WASC-Accrediting Commission for Schools". Retrieved 2009-06-05.
  2. MHS. "School History". Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
  3. Sparks, Sarah D. (2020-06-09). "Catholic School Closures Rise Amid COVID-19, Recession". Education Week. Retrieved 2020-06-26.


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