Notre Dame Academy of Frederick County and the School Sisters of Notre Dame

In the late 1890’s Fr. William H. “Ironsides” Reaney, pastor of St. Peter’s, approached Sallie Sappington, daughter of Thomas and Sarah Coale Sappington and granddaughter of Richard Coale who built the 1st St. Peters, about building a school.  Sallie agreed to donate the land – 7 acres, and with her brother Dr. Sidney Sappington and their nephew, James M. Sappington of G., they covered the cost of the construction of the combined school and convent building.   

In May 1893 Frederick paper, The Daily News, reported that Fr. Reaney returned to Liberty (he had been re-assigned to a post in the US Navy by this time) and “ … on Ascension Day had the happy pleasure of celebrating the first mass that has been said in the chapel of the academy.  Master Sidney Trundle served at the mass.”

The school was staffed by the Baltimore based School Sisters of Notre Dame, who opened the doors of their academy to 17 students on September 12, 1892, across the road from St. Peter’s church. 

Tuition was $5.00 per month and was most often paid in cash; however, payment was also made by providing use of a horse for the Sisters, supplying wheat, butter, apples, chickens, corn, lard, and turkeys, and by hauling coal and firewood.

The Sisters offered instruction in French, organ, piano, and voice for an additional charge.

 In June 1895, at the end of the Academy’s third school year, Frederick paper, The Citizen, reprinted an article which originally appeared in Liberty’s newspaper, The Banner of Liberty, on the annual closing exercises of the Academy.  In part the article noted that “[t]his school is well established and has a large list of pupils, who receive the very best instruction in all branches of knowledge.”  Testimony to this statement can be found in the wide curriculum evidenced in the grade and attendance records which the Sisters maintained from that time period.

Look for more articles on Notre Dame Academy in the coming months – there is much more history to share!

Other Key Moments in St Peter's History

Monsignor John A. Dietzenbach

Deacons John Martin, Jerry Jennings and Michael Dvorak

Fr. Martin W. Flahavan

Dedication of the Third Church

Fr. Francis Maleve

Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton

St. Peter’s Bicentennial

Consecration of St. Peter’s First Church

Bishop John Dubois

Religious Educators of our Children Over the Years