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Wisconsin Seminary League

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The Wisconsin Seminary League was a statewide interscholastic athletic organization consisting of Catholic seminaries in Wisconsin. It was operational from 1963 to 1969.

History

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St. Lawrence
St. Joseph
St. Francis de Sales
Salvatorian
Sacred Heart
Queen of Apostles
Mount St. Paul
Divine Word
Blessed Sacrament
Location of Original Wisconsin Seminary League Members

The Wisconsin Seminary League, also known by its official title of the Wisconsin Catholic Seminary Conference, was founded in 1963 by nine Catholic seminaries in the state of Wisconsin: Blessed Sacrament in Waupaca, Divine Word in East Troy, Mount St. Paul in Waukesha, Queen of Apostles in Madison, Sacred Heart in Oneida, Salvatorian in St. Nazianz, St. Francis de Sales in St. Francis, St. Joseph in Edgerton and St. Lawrence in Mount Calvary.[1] The age range for players was slightly different than those in traditional high schools; instead of grades 9-12, teams consisted of boys in grades 10-13.[2] Because of this, it was not associated with the Wisconsin Catholic Interscholastic Athletic Association, but WCIAA members were common non-conference athletic opponents. The conference was subdivided into divisions based on geography for their first season of basketball competition:[3]

Northern Division Southern Division
Blessed Sacrament Divine Word
Sacred Heart Mount St. Paul
Salvatorian Queen of Apostles
St. Lawrence St. Francis de Sales
St. Joseph

In 1965, the Pallotine Fathers ended Queen of Apostles' seminary program for a more traditional co-educational high school enrollment model,[4] and two seminaries joined the conference as replacements: Holy Name in Madison and St. Columban in Oconomowoc.[5] Both schools joined the conference's Southern Division:[6]

Northern Division Southern Division
Blessed Sacrament Divine Word
Sacred Heart Holy Name
Salvatorian Mount St. Paul
St. Lawrence St. Columban
St. Francis de Sales
St. Joseph

In 1966, three schools (Mount St. Paul, St. Columban and St. Francis de Sales) left the Wisconsin Seminary League and the organization consolidated down to one division with seven schools.[7] The conference's membership roster decreased to six in 1968, as Salvatorian Seminary closed and a new Catholic high school (John F. Kennedy Prep) opened on its former campus in St. Nazianz.[8] The Wisconsin Seminary League was disbanded in 1969,[9] by which time three of the remaining members (Holy Name, Sacred Heart, and St. Lawrence) had joined the WCIAA and remained members during that organization's transition into the Wisconsin Independent Schools Athletic Association.[10] Former Seminary League members Divine Word and St. Joseph joined WISAA in 1970, [11] and Blessed Sacrament closed its doors in 1971.[12]

Conference membership history

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Seminary Location Affiliation/Order Enrollment Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Blessed Sacrament Waupaca, WI Blessed Sacrament Fathers N/A (Boys only) Knights Unknown 1963 1969 Independent Closed in 1971
Divine Word East Troy, WI Verbite N/A (Boys only) Crusaders     1963 1969 Independent Closed in 1991
Mount St. Paul Waukesha, WI Salvatorian N/A (Boys only) Moors     1963 1966 Independent Closed
Queen of Apostles Madison, WI Pallotine N/A (Boys only) Queensmen     1963 1965 Closed (replaced by co-ed high school)
Sacred Heart Oneida, WI Norbertine N/A (Boys only) Scouts     1963 1969 Independent Closed in 1976
Salvatorian St. Nazianz, WI Salvatorian N/A (Boys only) Royals     1963 1968 Closed (replaced by JFK Prep)
St. Francis de Sales St. Francis, WI Salesian N/A (Boys only) Saints     1963 1966 Independent Closed in 1979
St. Joseph Edgerton, WI Redemption Fathers N/A (Boys only) Johawks     1963 1969 Independent Closed in 1980
St. Lawrence Mount Calvary, WI Franciscan 256 (Boys only) Hilltoppers     1963 1969 Fox Valley Tri-County Wisconsin Flyway
Holy Name Madison, WI Diocese of Madison N/A (Boys only) Hilanders     1965 1969 Independent Closed in 1995
St. Columban Oconomowoc, WI Missionary Society of St. Columban N/A (Boys only) Ramblers Unknown 1965 1966 Independent Closed in 1993

Membership timeline

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 Northern Division  Southern Division

References

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  1. ^ "Nine Catholic Seminaries Form State Cage League". Wisconsin State Journal. 1 March 1963. pp. 3, Section 3. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  2. ^ "Sacred Heart Joins Seminary Cage Conference". Green Bay Press-Gazette. 1 March 1963. p. 12. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  3. ^ "Salvatorian Seminary Quintet Begins Loop Action Tonight". Manitowoc Herald-Times-Reporter. 12 December 1963. p. 10. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  4. ^ "New Catholic High Readied Here". Wisconsin State Journal. 20 January 1965. pp. 15, Section 1. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  5. ^ "Holy Name Seminary Opens Loop Schedule". Wisconsin State Journal. 21 November 1965. pp. 3, Section 3. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  6. ^ "Royals Stage Rally, Bump Crusader '5'". Two Rivers Reporter. 9 December 1965. pp. 2-T. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  7. ^ "Royals Finish Third In Loop; Hurt By Injury". Two Rivers Reporter. 24 February 1967. pp. T-1. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  8. ^ Woessner, Bob (5 April 1968). "Seminary at St. Nazianz to Become High School". Green Bay Press-Gazette. pp. A-11. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  9. ^ Lindstrom, Don (13 September 1969). "Holy Name Cagers Hoe Tougher Row". Wisconsin State Journal. pp. 5, Section 3. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  10. ^ United Press International (29 April 1966). "Membership Up to 45 Schools in State WCIAA". Oshkosh Northwestern. p. 16. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  11. ^ "Join WISAA". The Capital Times. 27 August 1970. p. 34. Retrieved 5 May 2025.
  12. ^ Smith, Fern (6 June 1971). "Last Graduation Happy for Some, Sad for Many". Appleton Post-Crescent. pp. B4. Retrieved 5 May 2025.