Notre Dame of Cotabato

Notre Dame of Cotabato is a Roman Catholic private school in Cotabato City, Philippines that was established in 1948.

Notre Dame of Cotabato
Address
63 Sinsuat Avenue

,
Philippines
Coordinates7.2174361°N 124.2437917°E / 7.2174361; 124.2437917
Information
TypePrivate school
MottoWith a caring and daring H.E.A.R.T.
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
(Marist Brothers)[1]
EstablishedJune 1948 (June 1948)
FounderMarist[2],Oblates
DirectorAllan de Castro
PrincipalAgnes Gandulfo
Color(s)Blue, White, and Gold             
AffiliationNotre Dame Educational Association
Websitehttp://ndc-marist.edu.ph

History

On 1941, Emile Boldoc of the Oblate Fathers (OMI) invited the Marist Brothers from the Province of United States to start a mission in Mindanao. The school was already built around 1945 but because of World War II, the planned opening was delayed for a couple of years. After the war, Maurus James Doherty, Herbert Daniel Dumont, Joseph Damian Teston and Peter Leonard Thommen were the four Marist Brothers who arrived in 1948 in Cotabato.[2] On June 21, 1948, the said four Marist Brothers took over the school from the Oblates, thus becoming the first Marist school in the Philippines. The Religious of Virgin Mary (RVM) Sisters, who had been helping the Oblates in running the school, then took care of the girls' department (now Notre Dame – RVM College of Cotabato), while the Brothers has the boys' department, thus giving birth to Notre Dame of Cotabato (Boys' Department). In June 1996, the school opened an afternoon shift program for boys and girls. In June 2000, the school started to admit girls to the regular day shift session. Notre Dame of Cotabato (or N.D.C.) is the only Marist School in Cotabato City.

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References

  1. Susie G. Bugante (September 10, 2013). "2013's top employers: Jollibee, Notre Dame of Cotabato". Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2013.
  2. Meuten, Paul (2014). "Part A". The Marist Brothers of the Schools in the Philippines: The Mission Period (1941-1960). Marist Province of East Asia. pp. 14–17.
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