Kindergartners at St. Christopher School recently dressed up as 100-year-olds on the 100th day of the school year as part of the ongoing celebration of the 100th year of the school in Midlothian.
“Alumni have been so generous,” she said. “There are generations of families. … It becomes part of you. Fright night roller skating and teen dances. These are the things that spark community.” “I was on the School Board and fought for preschool,” she said, noting that when she attended, they did double shifts and had portable classrooms in the parking lot.“In 2014, they were going to close the school. People came together with pledges, local families, to keep it open, because they knew the value of it,” she shared, noting lots of leaders have come out of the school, including two former Midlothian mayors, a police chief and the current fire chief. “Alumni have been so generous.
Students sit in a classroom at St. Christopher School in 1962 in Midlothian. The school’s enrollment was its biggest during the 1960s and 1970s. The eighth grade graduating class of 1968 was its largest at 146 students. Assistant Principal Susan Calder, who also teaches sixth-, seventh- and eighth-grade social studies, has been with the Archdiocese of Chicago for 30 years. She attended St. Christopher with her nine siblings, graduating in 1981. “My mom had a kid in the school for 28 years!” she exclaimed. Gleason was her music teacher.“My chalkboard came down over the summer and I got a white board. I have a drawer full of chalk now,” she shared.
St. Christopher students line up in the parking lot recently to celebrate the school being open for 100 years.
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