Kapaun Mt. Carmel High School - History

History

Kapaun Mt. Carmel High School was established in 1971 as the result of the merger of Chaplain Kapaun Memorial High School and Mount Carmel Academy.

Chaplain Kapaun Memorial High School was named after Chaplain Emil Kapaun, a priest of the Wichita Diocese who served and died in the Korean War. It opened in 1956 another site on east Central Ave (not the same as the present site), in east Wichita, and was operated by the Jesuits as a preparatory school for young men. Jesuits served at the school in various capacities until the early 1990s. Alumni of the initial Chaplain Kapaun school recall that under the basketball court's "floating floor" was a rifle range, where students - under supervision - practiced marksmanship with school-supplied .22 cal rifles, and that supported a school rifle team.

Mount Carmel Academy was established in 1887 by the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary (BVM) as a girl's boarding school.

In 1961, the school moved to its current site in east Wichita. The BVM sisters served the school until the early 1990s.

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