Welcome to ECCSS!
ECCSS operates Pre/K through grade 12 in three buildings: St. Marys Catholic Elementary School (Pre/K-grade 5) at 114 Queens Road, St. Marys Catholic Middle School (grades 6-8) and Elk County Catholic High School (grades 9-12) at 600 Maurus Street, and St. Leo Catholic School (grades pre/K-grade 8) at 125 Depot St. in Ridgway, PA. Students of other faiths are welcome in all three schools.
Mission Statement
Elk County Catholic School System, an educational ministry of the Diocese of Erie, rooted in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, is committed to the highest standards of academic excellence. With God as our constant source of inspiration, our mission is to develop the whole student in mind, body, and spirit while nurturing the values of knowledge, peace, and holiness.
Accreditation
Elk County Catholic High School, St. Marys Catholic Middle School and St. Marys Catholic Elementary School are all accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools. The Middle States Association (MSA) was established by the academic profession in 1887 to set standards for American education. The MSA accredits public, independent, and religious schools serving students in NY, NJ, PA, DE, MD, DC, PR, and the USVI, as well as international schools throughout Africa, Europe, and the mid- and near-East.
As accredited schools, ECCHS, SMCMS, and SMCES have met standards for:
Goals & Programs
defining appropriate educational goals and providing educational programs to achieve them;
Faculty & Organization
maintaining a qualified faculty and an effective school organization;
Outcomes & Quality
assessing outcomes of school experiences and controlling the quality of educational programs;
Responding
responding to concerns of parents and needs of the school community;
Continuity & Planning
providing for the continuity of its programs and planning for their future;
Accuracy
describing with accuracy the content of its services and programs.
Rooted in the Gospel of Jesus Christ
History
1842-1868

The town of St. Marys was founded in 1842 primarily as a haven from religious discrimination for German Roman Catholics from Bavaria. The Roman Catholic parish called St. Mary’s was the center of the town in its early days. Sacred Heart Parish was formed a few decades later. From the 1850’s to the 1890’s, priests, sisters, and brothers taught in the public schools in the community. One exception was St. Benedict’s Academy which was opened by the Benedictine Sisters who came to the community in 1852. Their school was located where Elk Regional Health Center is now. It remained there until 1860; then the sisters moved to their present location on Maurus Street. St. Benedict’s Academy was built on the convent grounds in 1868. It was an all-girls school with both boarding students and day students from the community.
1895-1902

As a result of the 1895 PA Smith Garb Act which stated that no one dressed in religious habit could teach in public schools, St. Mary’s Parish and Sacred Heart Parish each opened its own grade school in 1896. Soon after, in 1901, St. Mary’s Parish built the St. Marys Catholic High School. In 1902, Sacred Heart Parish started its own high school in the parish hall located next to its elementary school. Both were wooden structures.
1923-1935

In the early 1920’s, Sacred Heart Parish built a sturdier, brick elementary building, Sacred Heart School, which opened in 1923. More room was also needed for high school students, so the two parishes in town joined to build St. Marys Central Catholic High School, which opened in 1925. In 1934, when the local hospital was destroyed by fire, the Benedictine Sisters offered St. Benedict’s Academy to become the community hospital. As a result, the girls’ academy was permanently closed with its last graduating class being the Class of 1935.
1950's

In response to the population explosion following World War II, the births now referred to as baby boomers, St. Mary’s Parish replaced its wooden structure with a stone school and moved its students into the St. Mary’s Parochial Grade School in 1952. In response to continued growth, Queen of the World Parish was established in the early 1950’s and opened its own grade school in 1957.
1960-1990

As the baby boomers grew older, Central Catholic High School no longer met the needs of the community. A new high school, Elk County Christian High School, was built and opened its doors in 1962 as a regional high school serving the three St. Marys parishes as well as the Roman Catholic parishes of Ridgway, Johnsonburg/Wilcox, Kersey, Bennetts Valley, Emporium, and Kane as well as students of other faiths. Control and responsibility for the high school was assumed by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie, PA. The school was subsequently renamed Elk County Catholic High School in 2001.
1990's-2000's

In 1999, the three St. Marys parishes, with the permission of the Bishop, formed a committee that resulted in a consolidation of the three parish elementary schools (St. Mary’s Parochial School, Sacred Heart School, and Queen of the World School) into a legal entity known as the St. Marys Catholic Elementary School System. In 2002, in connection with this consolidation, Pre/K through grade 5 were located in the former Queen of the World School, renamed St. Marys Catholic Elementary; grades 6 through 8 were located in the former St. Mary’s Parochial School, renamed St. Marys Catholic Middle; and Sacred Heart School was closed.
2010's-Present

A further study was undertaken, and in 2010, the St. Marys Catholic Elementary School System was dissolved. St. Marys Catholic Elementary and St. Marys Catholic Middle were absorbed along with Elk County Catholic High into a new legal entity known as the Elk County Catholic School System. Then, in the spring of 2013, it was announced that due to declining demographics, the St. Marys Catholic Middle School would be moved to the Elk County Catholic High School building. ECCHS and SMCMS now operate as two separate schools in the two wings of the former high school building.
ECCSS now operates Pre/K through grade 12 in three buildings:
- St. Marys Catholic Elementary School (Pre/K-grade 5) at 114 Queens Road
- St. Marys Catholic Middle School (grades 6-8) & Elk County Catholic High School (grades 9-12) at 600 Maurus Street
- St. Leo Catholic School (grades pre/K-grade 8) at 125 Depot St. in Ridgway, PA.
Students of other faiths are welcome in all three schools.
Board of Directors
The Board is responsible for the educational, financial, personnel, and maintenance policies of the Elk County Catholic School System. The Board oversees and manages the affairs of ECCSS, subject to the limitations imposed by the articles and bylaws, and the laws of the Roman Catholic Church, including those issued by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie. All directors serve without compensation. Parish representatives serve a term of office of three years, which coincides with ECCSS’s fiscal year.
Officers:
- Dan Wortman, Chair: Queen of the World Parish
- Jude Viglione, Vice Chair: St. Boniface Parish
- Amy Straub, Treasurer
- Ed Schlimm, Board Secretary: Sacred Heart Parish
Voting Members:
- Fr. Christopher Beran: ECCHS Campus Minister and Pastor of St. Boniface Parish
- Laura Blake: Superintendent of Catholic Schools of Erie
- Kassie Brem: Queen of the World Parish
- Mary Lynn Carnovale: Queen of the World Parish
- Mary Detwiler: St. Leo Parish
- Susan Dixon: St. Boniface Parish
- Jude Hoffman: Queen of the World Parish
- Vern Kreckel: St. Marys Parish
- Daniel Martuccio: St. Marks Parish
- Michelle Muccio-Krise: Queen of the World Parish
- Fr. Justin Pino: VP Catholic Mission, Pastor St. Leo Parish
- Lynn Schatz: Queen of the World Parish
- Msgr. Richard Siefer: Episopal Vicor
- Ralph Tettis Sr.: St. Leo Parish
Non-Voting Members:
- Fr. Christopher Beran: ECCHS Campus Minister and Pastor of St. Boniface Parish
- Bob Breindel, ECCSS Director of Finance, Queen of the World Parish
- Fr. Thomas Curry, O.S.B., Pastor, Sacred Heart Parish/St. Mary’s Parish
- Jessica Fritz, ECCSS Associate Director of Community Relations and Assistant Director of Marketing, St. Marys Parish
- Ted Hanes, ECCSS President
- Franchesca Herzing, ECCSS Director of Advancement, St. Boniface Parish
- Lynne Kucenski, Principal, St. Leo School, St. Leo Parish
- Melinda Lanzel, ECCSS Marketing and Enrollment Coordinator, Queen of the World Parish
- Fr. Jeff Noble, Pastor, Queen of the World Parish
- John Schneider, Principal, ECCHS and SMCMS, St. Marys Parish
- Debbie Slay, Principal, SMCES, Queen of the World Parish

