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Trinity Catholic High School (Missouri)

2003 establishments in MissouriEducational institutions established in 2003Missouri school stubsRoman Catholic Archdiocese of St. LouisRoman Catholic secondary schools in St. Louis County, Missouri
St. Louis building and structure stubs
Trinity Catholic High School in St. Louis County from street
Trinity Catholic High School in St. Louis County from street

Trinity Catholic High School was a private, Catholic high school in Spanish Lake Township, St. Louis County, Missouri. It was located in the Archdiocese of Saint Louis. The school closed in 2021.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Trinity Catholic High School (Missouri) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Trinity Catholic High School (Missouri)
Saint Mary Special Services,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.784722222222 ° E -90.223333333333 °
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Address

Trinity Catholic High School

Saint Mary Special Services 1720
63138
Missouri, United States
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Trinity Catholic High School in St. Louis County from street
Trinity Catholic High School in St. Louis County from street
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Nearby Places

Fort Belle Fontaine County Park
Fort Belle Fontaine County Park

The Fort Belle Fontaine County Park is a unit of the park system of St. Louis County, Missouri. 305.6 acres in size, it is bordered by the Missouri River, by Cold Water Creek, and by the Missouri Hills campus of the Missouri Division of Youth Services (M-DYS).The park contains part of the site of Fort Bellefontaine, a fortified post of the United States Army first raised in 1805. The post was visited by Lewis and Clark Expedition upon their return to St. Louis in September 1806. It remained in active service, in two adjacent locations, until 1826. None of the fort remains today. As of 2014, historic markers and signage educated visitors about the vanished post.The fort's location was built up in the 1930s as a parkland development project of the Works Progress Administration. Some WPA facilities remained in use in 2014, and others had evolved into picturesque ruined structures. A three-mile-long nature trail provides access to the creek ravine, WPA masonry, and the site of the vanished fort and trading post. Part of the parkland has been set aside as a reproduction tallgrass prairie, sown with big bluestem grasses and allied species. In the creekbed woods and adjacent uplands can be found the basswood, the burr oak, the chinquapin oak, and other mature-growth species of trees.The park shares a common boundary and entry point with the M-DYS juvenile detention center, and as of 2014 visitors to the park were asked to stop and sign in at a security checkpoint.