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Epiphany Apostolic College, formerly known as the Josephite Collegiate Seminary, was a Catholic minor seminary founded in Baltimore, Maryland in 1889 by John R. Slattery for the Mill Hill Missionaries, a UK-based society of apostolic life. A few years later, the seminary came under the service of the Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart (the Josephites), an American offshoot if the Mill Hills that specifically serves African Americans.

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  • Epiphany Apostolic College (en)
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  • Epiphany Apostolic College, formerly known as the Josephite Collegiate Seminary, was a Catholic minor seminary founded in Baltimore, Maryland in 1889 by John R. Slattery for the Mill Hill Missionaries, a UK-based society of apostolic life. A few years later, the seminary came under the service of the Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart (the Josephites), an American offshoot if the Mill Hills that specifically serves African Americans. (en)
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  • Epiphany Apostolic College (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Epiphany_Apostolic_College.jpg
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  • Epiphany Apostolic College's second and final location, in New York. (en)
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  • United States (en)
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  • defunct (en)
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  • Seminary (en)
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  • Epiphany Apostolic College, formerly known as the Josephite Collegiate Seminary, was a Catholic minor seminary founded in Baltimore, Maryland in 1889 by John R. Slattery for the Mill Hill Missionaries, a UK-based society of apostolic life. A few years later, the seminary came under the service of the Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart (the Josephites), an American offshoot if the Mill Hills that specifically serves African Americans. Two of the co-founders of the Josephites served as rectors of the seminary in its early history, Dominic Manley and Charles Uncles, the first African-American Catholic priest trained and ordained in the United States. For several decades in the early to late 20th century, however, racial politics led to the seminary being closed to most African Americans. The seminary later moved to New Windsor, New York in 1925, and was merged into the former Our Lady of Hope Seminary in 1970. The college building later became Epiphany Apostolic High School, which closed its doors in 1975. It is now the site of a public middle school. (en)
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