Established 1903
In 1903, a small two-room schoolhouse was constructed by Mr. John Wagner, a German farmer living in rural South Los Angeles. Naming it St. Michael’s in honor of his father, Michael, Mr. Wagner invited the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose to staff the school. The Dominican Sisters served as faculty and administrators at St. Michael’s until 2006. Five years after the school opened, St. Michael’s Church was established to serve the German and Irish Catholic families in the area.
The first classrooms housed 43 students ranging from first through eighth grades. As enrollment increased, the school campus grew with the additions of the brick school building and auditorium in 1926 and the four classroom annex in 1955. Also in 1955, St. Michael’s Girls High School was opened on site.
In the summer of 1965, the Watts area of Los Angeles became the site of racial rioting, which also spread to our neighborhood and beyond. Following the riots, the ethnic composition of the school began to change and the school served mainly an African American population from Louisiana. During the 1980s, a number of families from Mexico and Central America, as well as a large population of black Catholics from Belize joined the school community. The Los Angeles Riots of 1992 impacted school enrollment as families lost property and employment and moved out of the area. Since the 1990s our Latino population has increased as families move into the area from Mexico and Central America. In 1995, St. Michael’s Girls High School closed and merged with Regina Caeli High School. This merged school was renamed Queen of Angels Academy. In 2002, Queen of Angels also closed.
The school underwent a major renovation in 2004 thanks to the J.F. Shea Company. Also in 2004, St. Michael’s School began a unique collaborative relationship with St. Frances X. Cabrini School, another school served by the Dominican Sisters. The two schools established a partnership in order to better share resources. All faculty and staff were hired as “one faculty and staff for two schools,” thus allowing for mobility between campuses as necessary. From 2004 to 2006, the two schools shared one principal, with a vice-principal on each campus. In the fall of 2006, the decision was made to separate and assign each school its own on-site principal. Today, the school is staffed by a qualified group of lay educators.
Feast day:
September 29
The name Michael signifies “Who is like to God?” and was the war cry of the good angels in the battle fought in heaven against Satan and his followers. Holy Scripture describes St. Michael as “one of the chief princes” and leader of the forces of heaven in their triumph over the powers of hell. He has been especially honored and invoked as patron and protector by the Church from the time of the Apostles.
Although he is always called “the Archangel,” the Greek Fathers and many others place him over all the angels—as Prince of the Seraphim. St. Michael is the patron of grocers, mariners, paratroopers, police and sickness.