The school was founded by Italian Jesuits in 1877 in
Las Vegas, New Mexico. Another school was opened in
Morrison, Colorado, seven years later.[4] In 1888, the two schools were merged and renamed for
St. John Francis Regis to become Regis College, located on 52nd and Lowell Streets in Denver, Colorado. In 1921, the school was formally split into Regis High School and Regis College (now
Regis University). The high school and university coexisted on the Denver campus, sharing facilities until a dedicated building was constructed for the high school in 1984.In 1989, a parcel of land near Parker and Arapahoe Roads in Aurora was donated to the school. That area is now called the Campbell Campus, and it houses both the Girls and Boys Divisions. In 2016 Regis appointed David Card as president, the first layperson to hold that position.[5][6]
Demographics
The demographic breakdown of the 1,654 students enrolled in 2015-2016 was:[1]
Native American/Alaskan - 0.2%
Asian/Pacific islanders - 5.3%
Black - 3.9%
Hispanic - 8.4%
White - 81.9%
Multiracial - 0.3%
Athletics
As of 2018, Regis Jesuit had won 67 State Championships, with 54 for boys since 1988. The girls by their 13th year of existence had won 12 championships (including Spirit in 2010). This places Regis 6th in the state in number of State Championships.[7] In 2013
Sports Illustrated selected Regis as having the best high school athletics program in Colorado.[8]
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's
verifiability policy. Please
improve this article by removing names that do not have independent
reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate
citations.(June 2022)
C. Michael Callihan (Class of 1965), 42nd Lt. Governor of Colorado. Previously Gunnison County Assessor, Colorado State Representative, Colorado State Senator
Jack Swigert, test pilot for
NASA and astronaut with the
Apollo 13 crew; elected to Congress for
Colorado's 6th district, but died before being sworn in.[22]