Marker Monday: Duchesne Academy

Black and white photo of a large, three-story brick building with multiple windows and a covered entrance, surrounded by a lawn and young trees.
Marker Text

In October 1881, Mother Margaret Dunne and three religious of the Sacred Heart opened a boarding school for girls at a temporary location on Ninth and Howard in Omaha. On September 1, 1882, Bishop James O’Connor sold Park Place, a 12-acre site “west of town,” to the sisters for the sum of one dollar. Building construction commenced in February, and in November the Academy of the Sacred Heart opened to seventeen boarders.

 

On Easter Sunday, March 23, 1913, a devastating tornado demolished the north wing of the school. Reconstruction took a full year and changed the front entrance to the present circle drive. The school was approved for college courses in 1916, and in 1920 the Academy became Duchesne College and Convent of the Sacred Heart. Both college and grade school closed in the 1960s having educated thousands of students, pre-school through college.

 

Today Duchesne Academy of the Sacred Heart continues as a Catholic, four-year, college preparatory, high school for women. It exemplifies a tradition of religious commitment and builds on the educational excellence of the women religious who first came to this “frontier post in the far west.”

 

Location

3601 Burt St., Omaha. To view the marker’s location, click here.

 

More Images
Partially destroyed multi-story brick building with debris and collapsed walls, photographed in winter; handwritten text dated January 23, 1912.

Sacred Heart Academy after the tornado at Omaha on March 23, 1913.

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