The original St. Mary's College
The original college at this location, '''St. Mary's College''', was founded by the
Jesuits in 1848 as an
Indian mission. The school is the site of the first
cathedral west of the
Missouri River and east of the Rockies, the 1851 "log cathedral" of Bishop
John Baptist Miège, S.J., Apostolic Vicar of Kansas under Pope Pius IX known familiarly as "The Bishop East of the Rockies". When the
Potawatomi were forcibly removed, the Jesuits turned it into a boarding school for boys, until it closed during the
Great Depression. After 1931 the 465 acre (1.9 km²) plot hosted the divinity school of St. Louis University. With the movement of seminaries to the city after
Vatican II, the land was sold and the Jesuit divinity school returned to St. Louis in 1967.
Athletics The St. Mary's athletic teams were called the Knights. The college was a member of the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the
Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference (KCAC) from 1902–03 to 1930–31, the season where the school closed.
Notable people ;Alumni •
Robert Casey (1890–1962), combat veteran, newspaper correspondent and columnist for
Chicago Daily News. •
Charles Comiskey (1859–1931), baseball player, manager, team owner. He was the founding owner of the
Chicago White Sox.
Comiskey Park was named for him. ;Faculty •
Ernest Quigley (1880–1960), basketball referee, umpire in Major League Baseball, football coach at
Kansas Wesleyan University. At St. Mary's College, he was coach, teacher, athletic director from 1903 to 1912. == Saint Mary's Academy and College ==