Peoria Notre Dame school traces its roots back to 1863, when
Father Abram Ryan and seven
Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet founded a parochial school to educate young Catholic women in Peoria that would become Academy of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, known usually by the shorter name, Academy of Our Lady. A school for boys would later be established in 1899 and be called Spalding Institute, named for
John Lancaster Spalding, the first bishop of the
Peoria. The two schools were located across the street from each other and existed as separate schools with separate classes until 1973 when the administrations were merged into
Academy of Our Lady/Spalding Institute. The former buildings of the Academy/Spalding campus are
contributing properties of the
North Side Historic District, located just north of downtown Peoria across
Interstate 74.
Bergan High School was established in 1964 in what was then north Peoria near the intersection of Sheridan Road and Glen Avenue. The school was named for
Gerald Thomas Bergan, a graduate of Spalding Institute who was serving as Archbishop of Omaha. The school was established as co-ed (though classes were taught segregated by sex), contrary to Spalding and Academy which were separate at the time. In 1988, Bergan's enrollment had declined to 587 and the diocese, under the direction of Bishop Edward O'Rourke, decided to consolidate the two schools to form Peoria Notre Dame High School. The new school would use Bergan's campus but keep Spalding's mascot as the Fighting Irish. Notre Dame's boys' basketball team used the gymnasium on the former Spalding campus north of downtown Peoria until the 2005-2006 school year. The final game on February 24, 2006 saw over 2,000 people pack into the gym to watch Notre Dame play
Peoria-Manual. ==Proposed new campus==