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Villa Duchesne

1929 establishments in MissouriBuildings and structures in St. Louis County, MissouriEducational institutions established in 1929Girls' schools in MissouriPrivate K-12 schools in Missouri
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. LouisRoman Catholic secondary schools in St. Louis County, MissouriSacred Heart schools in the United States
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Villa Duchesne is an independent, Roman Catholic school in Frontenac, Missouri, United States linked with 147 schools in 30 countries through the International Network of Sacred Heart Schools. Villa Duchesne is coed in preschool and elementary and all-girls in grades 7-12. The preschool/elementary program was formerly called Oak Hill School. It was named for Sister Rose Philippine Duchesne.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Villa Duchesne (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Villa Duchesne
Frontenac Estates Drive,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.643611111111 ° E -90.416388888889 °
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Address

Villa Duchesne and Oak Hill School

Frontenac Estates Drive
63131
Missouri, United States
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Nearby Places

Westwood Country Club
Westwood Country Club

Westwood Country Club is a country club in Westwood, Missouri, in central St. Louis County, Missouri. Westwood Country Club is one of the top four elite St. Louis area country clubs, along with St. Louis Country Club, and, with Old Warson Country Club and Bellerive Country Club, one of the "big four" elite St. Louis clubs. Membership is about 650 families, mostly (although no longer entirely) Jewish.The par-72 18-hole golf course was designed by Harold Paddock and built in 1928. The course was more recently renovated under the direction of golf architect Keith Foster. There are four Har-Tru and six Deco Turf tennis courts and an Olympic-size swimming pool.The club was founded in 1907 specifically to provide a Jewish country club for the St. Louis area, during a time when most country clubs excluded Jews from membership. It was first built in the town of Glendale. By 1927 many of the members' households had moved westward to the Central West End and the towns of Clayton and Ladue, so farmland was purchased in what is now Westwood and a new club built, with the course designed by Paddock and the clubhouse by the firm of Maritz and Young. There were, at that time, also riding stables. We do not participate in things like [disclosing the slope rating of the golf course], because Westwood is a very, very private club. I don't think the members would want their club featured with any type of prominence. It's just not consistent with who we are. The club maintains a low public profile (there is no sign at the entrance, and the address was unpublished until recently) and a refined ambiance; conducting business on the premises is frowned upon. Membership criteria remains rather selective, favoring successive generations of families.The club was ranked 29th in the 2012 Platinum Clubs of America list of top full-service country clubs.