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Jesup Wakeman Scott High School is a public high school located in the Old West End neighborhood of Toledo, Ohio. It is part of Toledo Public Schools. It was named for a former editor of The Toledo Blade from 1844 to 1847. Scott was an entrepreneur, philanthropist and well-known civic leader who envisioned Toledo as the "Future Great City of ...
Scott High School sits on a 78-acre (320,000 m 2) campus that is shared with Woodland Middle School which was built in 1988. The campus includes a football field, softball and two baseball fields, lighted soccer field, tennis courts and is the only high school in Kenton County with an indoor pool. Scott now has a new wing addition with ...
Scott District High School was the first high school in Boone County. Named after its location of the Scott District, it opened in the Fall of 1911 in an old wood-frame building in Danville, West Virginia. In 1924, Scott High School moved to a new West Madison, West Virginia building. Scott High School is located at 1 Skyhawk Place, Madison, WV ...
Procaccino did not immediately respond to a phone call and emails from The Enquirer seeking comment. Scott High School serves more than 1,000 students in grades nine through 12 in suburban ...
The Scott High School principal — who was head of a local elementary school at the time — was filmed holding the beer bong high in the air as both girls drank from the multi-hosed funnel.
Scott High School (Ohio), located in Toledo, Ohio Scott High School (West Virginia) , located in Madison West Virginia Clifford Scott High School , located in East Orange, New Jersey from 1937–2002
Billy Hicks, the longtime Scott County High School boys basketball coach who led the Cardinals to two Boys’ Sweet 16 state championships and retired in 2019 as Kentucky’s all-time coaching ...
Until 1913, this was the city’s only high school building except for a few years where the first two years of high school were offered at East Side Central. Students were eventually transferred over to Jesup W. Scott High School in 1913 and Morrison R. Waite High School (named for Justice Morrison Waite) in 1914 when these schools were opened.