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In the early 1900s, Mary Packer Cummings could not have envisioned a century later her bucolic winter estate on scenic Empire Point of the St. John's River would be the site of a prestigious Episcopal preparatory school. Considered the wealthiest woman in the United States at the time, she had named her estate "Keystone Bluff" in honor of her home state, Pennsylvania. Upon her death in 1912, Mrs. Cummings left her property to St. John's Parish, with a request that it be used as a residence "for boys from broken homes and homes with insufficient support." For three decades her wishes were fulfilled by St. John's operation of The Church Home for Children or "Boy's Home."In the early 1960s, the...
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This publication lists names and biographical information on graduates and former cadets who have died.
The annual report of the Episcopal Church.