They're not covered widely but a really quick Google search tells a very different story. OP, I haven't found true neighborhoods like that in VA -- there just aren't as many Catholics as in the Northeast and Midwest-- but I'd agree with St. Leo's for a strong community feel. |
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https://www.americamagazine.org/issue/281/article/last-acceptable-prejudice
Anti-catholic sentiments persist today. |
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You get to be part of the local catholic community msiy by sending your kids to a catholic school snd being involved in that parish.It's not really about the street you live on.
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| ...MAINLY by sending your kids ... |
| When I was a kid I lived in CCDC walking distance from Blessed Sacrement and a lot of kids on my block went to school there. All those families seemed super tight knit. |
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I know what the OP is talking about. I grew up in St. Louis, where this is very common:
We used to live in Chevy Chase DC and go to Blessed Sacrament. It is super tight knit. My friends all send their kids to St. Peters on Capitol Hill and they have a great Catholic community. I have also heard good things about Kensington, MD and Hyattsville, MD. In VA, St. Mary's and Blessed Sacrament in Alexandria have tight parish schools, but St. Mary's is a large geographic area. |
| I don't think the neighborhood(s) around OLGC in Vienna are necessarily like this, but there are a lot of families on the surrounding streets that go to OLGC as parishioners or send their kids to the school. I live on a cul de sac nearby (we are parshioners) and all of my neighbors that are now empty nesters sent their kids to OLGC (including the folks we bough our house from). |