St. Benedict's Preparatory School is a Catholic college preparatory school in Newark, New Jersey run by the Benedictine monks of Newark Abbey.
Quick Facts St. Benedict's Preparatory School Collegium Sancti Benedicti, Address ...
St. Benedict's Preparatory School
Collegium Sancti Benedicti |
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School crest |
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520 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard , , 07102
United States |
Coordinates | 40°44′8″N 74°10′47″W |
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Type | Private, parochial day school and boarding school |
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Motto | Gratia Benedictus Nomine (Latin) (Blessed In Name And Grace) |
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Religious affiliation(s) | Catholic Church (Benedictines) |
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Established | 1868 |
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Founder | Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B. |
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NCES School ID | 00863704[1] |
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President | Abbot Augustine Curley, O.S.B. |
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Headmaster | Rev. Edwin Leahy, O.S.B |
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Faculty | 48.5 FTEs[1] |
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Grades | K–12 |
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Gender | Co-educational (grades K-8) Gender segregated (grades 9-12) |
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Enrollment | 749 (as of 2017–18)[1] |
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Student to teacher ratio | 15.4:1[1] |
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Campus | Urban |
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Campus size | 12 acres (49,000 m2) |
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Color(s) | Garnet and Gray[2] |
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Slogan | Whatever hurts my brother, hurts me and whatever helps my brother, helps me. |
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Song | Alma Mater |
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Fight song | Boola Boola Garnet and Gray |
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Athletics | 12 varsity teams |
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Nickname | Gray Bees[2] |
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Accreditation | Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools[3] |
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Publication | Kayrix (literary magazine) |
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Newspaper | The Benedict News |
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Yearbook | Telolog |
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Tuition | $13,000 (grades 9–12) $10,000 (grades 7–8) $4,060 (grades K-6)[4] |
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Affiliation | NJAIS |
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Assistant Headmaster | Mike Scanlan |
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Dean Of Faculty | Michelle Tuorto |
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Admissions Director | Mario Gallo |
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Athletic Director | Frank DiPiano |
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Website | www.sbp.org |
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The school serves boys and girls in kindergarten through twelfth grade on a 12-acre (4.9 ha) urban campus. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools since 1990.[3]
Established in 1868 by the Benedictine monks of Newark Abbey, the school is guided by the sixth century Rule of Saint Benedict. It has been located in the Archdiocese of Newark for more than 130 years.[5]
As of the 2017–18 school year, the school had an enrollment of 749 students and 48.5 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 15.4:1. The school's student body was 55.1% (413) Black, 29.8% (223) Hispanic, 7.1% (53) two or more races, 6.4% (48) White and 1.5% (11) Asian.[1] The school serves students from Newark and its neighboring communities; students come from 100 towns and approximately 215 schools. More than 60 are from 23 other countries.[4]
Starting in the 2017–18 school year, the former St. Mary School began operating within St. Benedict's. Classes for kindergarten through eighth grade are co-ed. The high school, known as the prep division, became co institutional (boys and girls are admitted, but are segregated in classes) in the 2020-2021 school year, after its sister school, Benedictine Academy in Elizabeth closed in the spring of 2020. [6] [7]
The school was closed for the 1972–73 school year. Since its re-opening in 1973, the headmaster has been Fr. Edwin D. Leahy, O.S.B, who was graduated from St. Benedict's in 1963.[8]
St. Benedict's school year differs from most high schools. The school year is divided into three "phases"; Summer phase, Fall-Winter phase, and Spring phase. During Summer phase the whole student body of St. Benedict's gathers for a five-week session of half-day classes during August. For the members of the Freshman class, the session begins with the five-day overnight. The Freshman class is divided into 18 groups of approximately eight students each, with an older student acting as counselor for the week, preferably a sophomore or junior student. Meals are taken "family style" in the dining room, as students taking turns being the waiters for their designated group, setting the table, serving the food, and clearing up afterward. Freshmen meet faculty members and older students, discover Benedict's history and traditions and learn the school songs. At the end of the week the students will be quizzed verbally on the school's history by current faculty, leaders, and alumni. The numbers of questions depends solely on who the person is, and passing will result in the students earning their colors (Garnet & Gray).
During the fall-winter phase students have regular school days with classes beginning at 7:50 and daily convocation in the Shanley Gym at 7:50 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Wednesday is an early dismissal at 2:15pm. On Thursday, school begins with convocation at 7:50 followed by Mass (Catholic church service) for one of the four sections of the school. The sections alternate turns going to Mass each week, attending Mass approximately once a month. During convocation, prayers are said and songs are sung with the whole community present. At the end of convocation there is a brief time period during which the entire community takes part in sharing announcements with the rest of the school body. These announcements are about upcoming events, results from past events, meetings for leadership, opportunities for extra help, and things that the community is either doing well with or needs to improve on.
Spring phase ends the academic year. Students choose projects to work on for four weeks such as community service, U.S. history, gardening, dancing, music production, photography, journalism, finance, acting, physics, intense exercising, karate, and cooking.
At the end of the Freshmen year, freshmen spend a week together. They sleep in tents and team members take turns cooking for one another, preparing food they have carried on their backs. The Backpacking Project is a five-day trek over 50 miles (80 km) of the Appalachian Trail in the mountains of western New Jersey. Freshmen form themselves into 16 teams of eight members each and elect a leader. Upon selecting a leader, they also make decisions for the rest of available positions, which are the camping specialists (2), the cooks (2), the first aid person (1), the nature specialist (1), the navigator (1), and the captain. Four such teams make a "company" that is led by specially trained older students, first-aiders, and adults. Three weeks of intense training precede the week on the trail.[9] Bringing back old history, transfer students no longer have choice as they too have to walk the trail.
St. Benedict's is divided into 18 groups of about 20 to 30 members each. Each group, named after successful Benedict's alumnus, meets daily, competes in events, academics, attendance, and plays an active role in running the school. Each group elects a student Group Leader and Assistant Leaders and works closely with its faculty advisers. The school is run by group of eight distinctive seniors. The Senior Group leader, four section leaders, a freshman leader, a transfer leader, and a seventh and eighth grade leader. They work together daily in leading the school and enforcing rules.[9]
The St. Benedict's Preparatory School Gray Bees,[2] compete in 12 interscholastic sports: water polo, cross country running, soccer, swimming, fencing, wrestling, basketball, indoor track, crew, golf, baseball, and outdoor track. The school has produced several notable athletes including an Olympic gold medalist.[10] School colors are garnet and gray.[2]
The cross country running team won the all-group state championship in 1921 and the Prep title in nine times from 1922 to 1931. The program's nine state group titles are tied for seventh-most in the state.[11]
The track team won the winter / indoor track Non-Public state championship in six times from 1922 to 1927 and seven times from 1931 to 1937. The 13 state group titles won by the program are ranked fourth in the state.[12]
The track team won the Non-Public Group A spring / outdoor track state championship in 1949.[13]
The wrestling team won the Non-Public Group B North state sectional championship in 1980 (as co-champion), 1984, 1985, 1987, and 1989 to 1991. The team won the Non-public Group B state title in 1987 and 1989 to 1991.[14]
The fencing team won the overall state championship in 1990.[15]
St. Benedict's basketball team, coached by Mark Taylor since 2011, consistently ranks as one of the top high-school basketball teams in the United States among USA Today High School Boys' Basketball Super 25.[16][17] and is part of what The New York Times calls the "NBA pipeline".[18] In 2013, the basketball team was ranked fifth in ESPN's top 25, losing to Montverde Academy in the ESPN Rise National Championship.
The soccer team won the Non-Public Group B state championship in 1982 (against runner-up Mater Dei High School in the finals of the tournament), 1987 (vs. Mater Dei), 1989 (vs. Eustace Preparatory School) and 1990 (vs. St. Augustine Preparatory School).[19] The 1982 team finished the season with an 18-3-1 record after coming back from a 2–0 deficit to win the Parochial B state title with a 3–2 win against Mater Dei in the championship game at Mercer County Park.[20] The 2006 boys' soccer team finished the season with a 20–0 record, and was ranked first in the nation in the NSCAA/adidas National Rankings.[21] A 4–1 win against the Pennington School in the 2011 Prep A championship gave St. Benedict's a perfect 24–0 season, its 23rd consecutive Prep A title and its seventh spot as the top-ranked high school soccer team in the nation by ESPN/Rise, having previously been recognized as national champion in 1990, 1997–98, 2001, 2005–06 and repeating in 2011–2012 and 2012–2013.[22][23] Numerous alumni of the soccer program have become world-renowned players.[24]
St. Benedict's has a music program and a visual arts program.
The Benedict News student newspaper has won the Columbia Scholastic Press Association gold medal three times, in 2005, 2006, and again in 2008.[25] The school literary magazine, The Kayrix, is published every year during spring phase.
The 520 is a student-run maintenance corporation. The goal of the corporation is to cost-effectively support the maintenance needs of the school while enhancing the environment and providing students with the opportunity to develop skills and earn a competitive income. The corporation was established in 1998.
The history of the school is related in Thomas A. McCabe's Miracle on High Street (New York: Fordham University Press, 2010). On March 20, 2016, the school was featured in a segment of 60 Minutes called "The Resurrection of St. Benedict's".[26]
In June 2021, an article in The New York Timess documented students participating in a half-century-old school tradition in which freshmen are required to complete a 50-mile (80 km) hike along the Delaware Water Gap section of the Appalachian Trail.[27]
The critically acclaimed documentary about Newark Abbey and Saint Benedict's Prep, The Rule (2014), by Emmy-nominated, Newark-based filmmakers Marylou and Jerome Bongiorno, was released theatrically,[28] broadcast nationally on PBS,[29][30] and was screened by the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans at the U.S. Department of Education.[31] The film premiered at the 2014 Montclair Film Festival.[32]
Alumni
- Precious Achiuwa (born 1999), professional basketball player for the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association.[33]
- Hugh Joseph Addonizio (1914-1981), politician who served for 13 years as a U.S. Congressman before serving as Mayor of Newark from 1962 to 1970.[34]
- Juan Agudelo (born 1992), professional soccer player in Major League Soccer.[35]
- Gregg Berhalter (born 1973), professional soccer player and coach, member of 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cup teams, coach of the United States men's national soccer team.[36]
- Gilvydas Biruta (born 1991), Lithuanian basketball player for JL Bourg-en-Bresse of the Pro A.[37]
- Isaiah Briscoe (born 1996), basketball player for the Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team who transferred out after his sophomore year.[38]
- A. J. Calloway (born 1974), television personality[39]
- Jonathan Capehart (born 1967), journalist and television personality who writes the PostPartisan blog for The Washington Post.[40]
- Peter A. Carlesimo (1915–2003), basketball coach.[41]
- Ownie Carroll (1902–1975), Major League Baseball pitcher who played nine seasons in the majors, from 1925 to 1934.[42]
- Edward Cheserek (born 1994), runner for the University of Oregon who won the 2013 NCAA cross country championship and track and field championship.[43]
- Moussa Cissé (born 2002), college basketball player for the Oklahoma State Cowboys[44]
- Bill Clarkin (1900–1982), professional football in the National Football League who played as a tackle and guard for the Orange Tornadoes.[45]
- George Thomas Coker (born 1943), United States Navy aviator who was a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War.[46]
- David Cubillán (born 1987), basketball player for the Marquette Golden Eagles[47]
- John J. Degnan (born 1944), Attorney General of New Jersey, 1978–1981, vice chairman and chief operating officer of The Chubb Corporation.[48]
- Jim Delany (born 1948), former commissioner of the Big Ten Conference.[49]
- Joe Dooley (born 1966), head basketball coach at East Carolina Pirates men's basketball team.[50]
- Trevon Duval (born 1998), basketball player for the Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team.[51]
- Gregory Echenique (born 1990), professional basketball player for the Shimane Susanoo Magic of the B.League.[52]
- Bobby Edwards (born 1995), soccer goalkeeper.[53]
- Tyler Ennis (born 1994), basketball player for the Los Angeles Lakers.[54]
- Aaron Estrada (born 2001), standout college basketball player who was the 2022 Colonial Athletic Association Player of the Year[55]
- Bill Feaster (1904–1950), professional football player who spent two seasons in the National Football League with the Orange/Newark Tornadoes[56]
- Gabriel Ferrari (born 1988), professional soccer striker.[57][58]
- Allen Gavilanes (born 1999), soccer player who plays for Greenville Triumph SC in USL League One.[59]
- John Joseph Gibbons (1924–2018), federal judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, president of the New Jersey State Bar Association and partner at the Gibbons P.C. law firm.[60]
- George Ludlum Hartford (1864–1957), longtime chairman and Treasurer of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company who started working in the supermarket chain while still a student.[61]
- John Holland (born 1988), American-Puerto Rican basketball player for Hapoel Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Cullen Jones (born 1984), Gold Medalist at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing in the Men's 4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay.[62]
- G. Gordon Liddy (1930–2021), central figure in the Watergate scandal, mastermind of the break into Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate building in 1972.[63]
- Scott Machado (born 1990), basketball player who plays for Hapoel Eilat of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.[64]
- Philip McHarris (born 1992), civil rights activist, political writer and academic at Yale University.[65]
- Andris Misters (born 1992), Latvian professional basketball player for VEF Rīga of the Latvian Basketball League.[66]
- Mpho Moloi (born 1983), drafted by the Houston Dynamo of Major League Soccer in 2006 and won the MLS Championship with them.[67]
- Xavier Munford (born 1992), basketball player for Hapoel Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.[68]
- Kevin O'Connor (born 1968; class of 1986), host of This Old House.[69]
- Mike Olla (born 1994), professional soccer forward.[70]
- Robert DeShaun Peace (1980-2011), subject of the biography The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace.[71][72]
- Tab Ramos (born 1966), former professional soccer midfielder who has been inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame.[73]
- Claudio Reyna (born 1973), soccer midfielder; two-time Parade Magazine High School Player of the Year; three-time First Team All American at University of Virginia; College Player of the Century; played for Manchester City in England, Rangers F.C. in Scotland and Major League Soccer's New York Red Bulls; member of 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics, 1998, 2002 and 2006 FIFA World Cup teams; National Soccer Hall of Fame[73]
- Jamar Ricketts (born 2001, class of 2020), professional soccer player who plays for Major League Soccer club San Jose Earthquakes[74]
- Frank E. Rodgers (1909–2000), politician who served for 48 years as Mayor of Harrison, New Jersey, ranking him among the longest-serving Mayors in U.S. history.[75]
- Zack Rosen (born 1989), All-American basketball player at Penn who played for Maccabi Ashdod in Israel.[76]
- Noah Sadaoui (born 1993, class of 2011), Moroccan-American professional soccer player who currently plays as a winger with Al-Khaburah Club.[77]
- Samardo Samuels (born 1989), power forward/center who played for the Cleveland Cavaliers and currently plays for Olimpia Milano.[78]
- Chris Smith (born 1987), basketball player for Hapoel Galil Elyon of the Israeli Liga Leumit[79]
- J. R. Smith (born 1985), former professional basketball player and two-time NBA champion.[80]
- John M. Smith (1935–2019), prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who served as the ninth Bishop of Trenton, from 1997 to 2010.[81]
- Corey Stokes (born 1988), Villanova shooting guard who was selected to compete in the McDonald's All-American Game.[82]
- Walt Szot (1920–1981), football tackle who played five seasons in the NFL with the Chicago Cardinals and Pittsburgh Steelers.[83]
- Lance Thomas (born 1988), former Duke basketball player and member of the 2010 NCAA Championship team and currently plays for the New York Knicks.[84]
- Arnaldo Toro (born 1997), basketball player[85]
- Petter Villegas (born 1975), soccer winger, who played in Major League Soccer and for the Puerto Rico national football team.[86]
- Dick Weisgerber (1915-1984), defensive back, fullback and kicker who played four NFL seasons with the Green Bay Packers.[87]
- John J. Wilson (1926-2015), politician who served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 1958 to 1964.[88]
- Michael Young (born 1994), basketball player for Ironi Nahariya of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.[89]
Faculty
- Ernest Blood (1872–1955), basketball coach who led St. Benedict's Prep to a 421–128 record and five state championships from 1925 to 1950.[90]
- Dan Hurley (2001–2010), basketball coach and former player and member of famed Hurley family, who led the Gray Bees to a 223-21 overall record while head coach and became the fastest coach in New Jersey basketball history to reach the 200-win mark.[91]
Clark, Adam. "St. Benedict's, renowned all-boys school, merges with co-ed elementary school", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, March 14, 2017. Accessed May 2, 2017. "St. Benedict's Preparatory School, a Newark Catholic boys' school that's earned national recognition for its academic success, will expand to offer a co-ed elementary school and middle school classes for girls, the school announced Tuesday. The change at St. Benedict's, a school founded by the Benedictine Monks in 1868, comes as part of a merger with St. Mary School, the state's oldest existing Catholic elementary school... St. Benedict's will now operate a co-ed K-6 school, a 7th and 8th grade school with separate classes for boys and girls and its existing high school, which will remain an all boys school."
"Seraph's title dreams go up in smoke with 3-2 loss", Asbury Park Press, November 20, 1982. Accessed February 8, 2021, via Newspapers.com. "Mater Dei's defense of the NJSIAA Parochial B soccer championship began with a bang yesterday, but ended with a whimper After the Seraphs had taken an early 2-0 lead, St. Benedict's rallied for three goals to the second half to post a 3-2 victory at Mercer County Park and wrest away the crown.... Records: NJSIAA Parochial B championship at Mercer County Park. Mater Dei (17-3-2). St. Benedict's (18-3-1)."
Staff. "Pennington (1) at St. Benedict's (4), Prep A Tournament, Final Round – Boys' Soccer", Trenton Times, November 6, 2011. Accessed December 5, 2011. "With the victory, St. Benedict's completed a perfect 24-0 campaign and will finish as the No. 1 ranked team in the country for the seventh time in school history and first time since 2006. The title is the 23rd straight Prep A crown and 25th overall state title for St. Benedict's, which will carry a 36-game winning streak into next year.... St. Benedict's, which was guaranteed the ESPN/Rise No. 1 spot in the national rankings with a victory, also won national championships in 1990, '97, '98, 2001, '05 and '06."
The Benedict News, Issuu. Accessed June 9, 2014. "Columbia Scholastic Press Association Gold Medalist: 2005, 2006, 2008"
Scheck, Frank. "The Rule: Film Review", The Hollywood Reporter, September 4, 2014. Accessed November 5, 2017. "As with so many socially themed documentaries, The Rule barrages the viewer with a dizzying array of dispiriting statistics, in this case about the city of Newark, New Jersey. We learn that it has a 32% poverty rate; the seventh-highest murder rate in the U.S; and that only 13% of its young people graduate college, among other things. But this film by husband and wife filmmakers Marylou Bongiorno and Jerome Bongiorno offers an uplifting ray of hope in its portrait of St. Benedict’s Prep, a nearly 150-year-old inner city prep school run by the black-robed monks of Newark Abbey."
Weisfeld, Oren. "How Precious Achiuwa’s Basketball Career Came Full Circle in Toronto", Complex.com, October 20, 2021. Accessed January 18, 2022. "Achiuwa grew from 6-foot-2 to 6-foot-9 over the course of four short years, moving along the way from small forward to center as he went from Our Savior Lutheran in the Bronx to St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark, New Jersey to the illustrious Montverde Academy near Orlando, Florida."
Barbanel, Josh. "Hugh J. Addonizio 67, Convicted Of Extortion As Newark's Mayor", The New York Times, February 3, 1981. Accessed November 15, 2018. "The son of Italian immigrants, Mr. Addonizio was born in Newark on Jan. 31, 1914, and attended West Side High School and St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, where he was an outstanding athlete and was named all-state quarterback."
Gregg Berhalter profile, US Soccer. Accessed May 3, 2007. "A four-year letter winner for St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, N.J., where he started on the team that won two state championships and ranked No. 2 and No. 1 in the nation in 1989 (22–0) and 1990 (25–0), respectively."
Carter, Barry. "Newark Mayor Ras Baraka celebrates his birthday", The Star-Ledger, April 14, 2015. Accessed November 5, 2017. "Rounding out the Brick City cast was Actor JD Williams, a Newark Arts High School graduate who appeared in the HBO mini series, The Wire, and A.J. Calloway, a St. Benedict Preparatory School graduate in Newark and now a New York City correspondent for Extra."
Seiden, Jane. "Jonathan Capehart Will Speak at the Newark Public Library", Newark Patch, January 22, 2016. Accessed February 8, 2016. "Mr. Capehart, a Washington Post editorial board member, PostPartisan blogger, and MSNBC contributor, was born and raised in Newark and graduated from St. Benedict's Preparatory School."
Givony, Jonathon. "No. 24-rated prospect Moussa Cisse commits to Memphis basketball", ESPN, July 15, 2020. Accessed January 18, 2022. "Cisse, who was born in the West African country of Guinea, moved to the United States in December 2016. He played at St. Benedict's Prep in New Jersey and Christ the King High School in New York before electing to move to Memphis last summer to attend Lausanne Collegiate School. While at St. Benedict's, he played with Precious Achiuwa, who is now a projected lottery pick after one season at Memphis."
Galarcep, Ives. "Angulo will chase his dream", Herald News, May 16, 2007. "'He's one of the most talented attacking players that I've coached in 22 years,' said St. Benedict's Prep coach Rick Jacobs, who counts Ramos, Claudio Reyna and Serie A striker Gabriel Ferrari among his former players.
"Geo. Hartford, Head of A&P, Dies at Age 92", The Montclair Times, September 26, 1957. Accessed January 18, 2022, via Newspapers.com. "Funeral services for George Ludlum Hartford. 92, last survivor of the trio of Hartfords who became "family grocers more people than anyone else in historv, will be held this afternoon at 2:30 in the family home, 3 Crestmont Rd.... 'Mr. George,' as he was affectionately known to 145,000 coworkers in A&P, entered his father's business in 1876 at the age of 12 as a part-time helper, filling inkwells and keeping the fires going. At that time he was also attending St. Benedict's Prep School in Newark."
Mallozzi, Vincent M. "U.S. Swimmer Hopes to Inspire", The New York Times, August 3, 2008. Accessed August 13, 2012. "He joined the Newark Swim Team and began standing out at St. Benedict's Preparatory School in Newark and with a West Orange-based club team, Metro Express."
Wechsler, Philip. "Liddy Is Recalled As Youth in Jersey; Tenacity Recalled Average Teen-Ager Respect for Law and Order Dated Liddy's Sister Never a Ladies Man First Lieutenant in Army", The New York Times, August 27, 1973. Accessed May 11, 2011. "At a time when track was a popular sport, G. Gordon Liddy, second from the right, top, made the St. Benedict's cross-country team, winner of the state prep championship."
Bondy, Stefan. "Zack Rosen and Scott Machado: from highschool teammates to combine competitors", New York Daily News, May 19, 2012. Accessed August 13, 2012. "Rosen, a native of Colonia, NJ, who attended St. Benedict's Prep, averaged 18.2 points with 5.2 assists as a senior last season. He was teammates at St. Benedict's with another projected second-round point guard at Saturday's combine, Scott Machado, the NCAA's assist leader last season for Iona."
Pave, Marvin. "‘World of Difference’ BC’s Learning to Learn Program a national model for helping students adjust to challenge of college", The Boston College Chronicle, November 12, 2015. Accessed April 30, 2020. "'CTP created a community for me before I even started classes as a freshman and Dan Bunch was a mentor early-on,' said Philip McHarris ’14, who now is a McNair Scholar in his second year of doctoral studies at Yale. 'Before meeting him I knew about him because some students at BC who went to my high school [St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark, NJ] talked about him. LTL was my home away from home freshman year, and while I had faith in myself, Dan always raised the bar.'"
Murphy, Austin. "On the Periphery: Xavier Munford", Popgates, December 17, 2015. Accessed February 8, 2016. "Point guard by way of Hillside, New Jersey, Munford played for St. Benedict's Prep before making his way through the junior college system at Miami-Dade College and Iowa Western College, eventually landing at Rhode Island as a junior."
Staff. "Class Notes and Milestones" Archived July 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, St. Benedict's Prep Newsletter, Summer 2012, p. 6. Accessed June 9, 2014. "John Matthews '85 wrote that Kevin O'Connor '86 of This Old House has a new book about the show Best of This Old House, which, as of September 2011, was on the Boston Globe's best seller list"
Giridharadas, Anand. "Man Down", The New York Times, September 18, 2014. Accessed January 18, 2022. "Hobbs methodically reconstructs each of the worlds that made his friend: Peace’s boyhood house on Chapman Street, with its 'weedy rectangle of lawn' and 'five buckled stoop stairs'; the fiercely loving St. Benedict’s Preparatory School, where the boys sang school songs in the corridors..."
Galacep, Ives. "Immersed in the game", Herald News, October 24, 2006, backed up by the Internet Archive as of February 10, 2007. Accessed December 1, 2016. "It isn't every day that a 15-year-old is mentioned as a candidate to add his name to the storied list of New Jersey standouts to leave St. Benedict's for memorable professional careers, such as U.S. national team legends Tab Ramos and Claudio Reyna."
Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey, Volume 200, Part 2, p. 230. J.A. Fitzgerald., 1983. Accessed December 21, 2022. "Frank E. Rodgers, Dem., Harrison - Senator Rodgers is a lifelong resident of Harrison, where he was born Nov. 15, 1909. He attended Holy Cross School there and St. Benedict's Prep, Newark."
Bishop John M. Smith Archived April 19, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, New Jersey Catholic Conference. Accessed November 29, 2017. "John M. Smith was born in Orange on June 23, 1935, the oldest son of Mrs. Ethel Charnock Smith and Mortimer F. Smith, now both deceased..... He attended Saint John Parochial Elementary School in Orange, New Jersey, and Saint Benedict Preparatory School in Newark, New Jersey."
Hall of Fame Bio: Walter Szot, Bucknell Bison. Accessed November 23, 2015. "A graduate of St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, N.J., Szot was also on the boxing team for one year and was president of the 'B' Club as a senior."
Dick Weisgerber, NJ Sports Heroes. Accessed November 8, 2017. "Richard Arthur Weisgerber was born February 19, 1913, in Kearny and grew up in Newark. Fast and powerful, Dick was drawn to football as a boy and starred in high School for St. Benedict’s Prep."
Sports biography of Blood, Ernest A. Archived January 25, 2013, at archive.today, HickokSports.com. Accessed May 3, 2007. "Blood coached at the U. S. Military Academy in 1924–25 and 1925–26, then went to St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, where he spent the rest of his career, retiring in 1949. His St. Benedict's teams won five state championships."
Dan Hurley, University of Rhode Island. Accessed February 18, 2019. "coaching for St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark, NJ, he registered a 223-21 overall record and became the fastest coach in New Jersey basketball history to reach the 200-win mark."