The week of January 26 through February 3, 2025, has officially been proclaimed “Catholic Schools Week” in Cullman by Mayor Woody Jacobs. On hand on Wednesday, January 22, 2025, to accept the proclamation from Mayor Jacobs on behalf of Sacred Heart Catholic School was teacher Jennifer Arndt.

Catholic Schools Week is celebrated throughout the country beginning on the last Sunday in January through the following Saturday. It is an annual celebration of Catholic education. During Catholic Schools Week, schools and communities focus on the value Catholic education provides to young people as well as to Catholic schools’ impact on their communities and our nation.

“Sacred Heart Catholic School in Cullman has been around almost as long as Cullman has,” said Mayor Jacobs. “Throughout their history, Sacred Heart school has played a vital role in shaping our community, and they continue to do so.”

Sacred Heart Catholic School began in December of 1878 by the Notre Dame Sisters from Milwaukee as a school for Catholics and non-Catholics. By January 1879, the attendance numbered 100. The school, then known as Mary Help School, was staffed by the Notre Dame Sisters for twenty years, from 1878 through 1898. Once the Sisters were asked to return home to Milwaukee, Abbot Benedict and the monks at St. Bernard Monastery began to look for a community to take over the school. In September 1898, a group of five Benedictine Sisters from San Antonio, Florida, arrived to staff the school. In June of 1902, eight Benedictine Sisters from St. Walburga Convent, Covington, Kentucky, joined the group and the name of Mary Help School was changed to Sacred Heart School.

Over the years, the original wooden frame church and the first two-story wooden school building were replaced with the present beautiful stone structures we see and admire today. Sacred Heart School received State Accreditation on January 22, 1973, and was the first church school in Alabama to be accredited! Two years later, accreditation was received from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Throughout the many changes the school has seen over the years, its primary purpose has remained the same: To provide an instructional program with a Catholic Christian atmosphere of love and guidance.

“We are thankful for the folks at Sacred Heart School and we appreciate all they do for the youth of our community,” said Mayor Jacobs. “We also appreciate Sacred Heart School and Church for all they do to make Cullman a better place live, worship, and raise our families.”

The national theme for this year’s Catholic Schools Week is “Catholic Schools: United in Faith and Community.” Sacred Heart Catholic School will celebrate this week with Masses and other events and activities for its students, families, parishioners, and community members focusing on the role that Catholic schools play in the Church’s evangelizing mission. The central goal of Catholic education is to form saints by teaching and embracing the whole person, body, mind, and spirit. Catholic school communities expand beyond the walls of school buildings to envelop the family as an integral part of the school community. Teachers, administrators, staff, and parents all work together to fuel the light of faith in students.

In the words of the National Catholic Educational Association: No Catholic school can fulfill its educational role alone. As a community, Catholic schools are nourished and stimulated by the centrality of the word of Christ expressed through knowledge, service, scripture, and sacramental tradition.

During Catholic Schools Week, Mayor Jacobs urges all citizens to recognize the influence and impact Catholic education has on our society and to celebrate the success of Sacred Heart School and its many contributions to our community.

To learn more about Sacred Heart School, visit their website at shscullman.com. To find out more about National Catholic Schools Week, visit the National Catholic Educational Association’s website at ncea.org/CSW.

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Pictured L-R: Jennifer Arndt and Mayor Jacobs