Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 1928 construction on what was initially called West Seattle Intermediate School began. It opened in September 1929 as James Madison Intermediate School with 749 seventh and eighth grade students. Designed by School District architect Floyd Naramore for a capacity of 1300, the 1931 addition increased capacity to 1750 students. A new gymnasium ...
Model Middle School (1970–1973), antecedent of South Shore Middle School. [8] R.H. Thomson Jr. High (1962–1981); the building is now the site of Broadview-Thomson Elementary. [9] (Woodrow) Wilson Jr. High. Opened 1953 by Shoreline School District, annexed 1954, added to several times. Became Wilson Middle School 1971. Closed as middle ...
Kings Road School [12] with 292 students in grades K–5 Kathleen Koop, principal [8] Torey J. Sabatini School [13] with 292 students in grades K–5 Ileana Garcia, principal [8] Middle school. Madison Junior School [14] with 557 students in grades 6–8 Frank Perrone, principal; High school. Madison High School [15] with 816 students in grades ...
Jorge Mas Canosa Middle School; Jose de Diego Middle School; Kinloch Park Middle School; Lake Stevens Middle School; Lamar Louise Curry Middle School; Lawton Chiles Middle School; Madison Middle School; Miami Arts Studio @Zelda Glazer 6-12; Miami Edison Middle School; Miami Lakes Middle School; Miami Springs Middle School; Nautilus Middle ...
Meanwhile, in 1873 the two-room North School opened at Third and Pine, [14] and in 1875 the school district had purchased 1.4 acres (5,700 m 2) at 6th and Madison, where the Sixth Street School, also known as Eastern School, opened promptly in a temporary building and grew into successively larger and better-built buildings in 1877 and 1883 ...
The Madison County Schools community gathered March 3 at Madison Middle School for a memorial service. Sarrah Lewis, Madison 7th-grader who died from flu B, remembered as a loving neighbor Skip to ...
As of the 2020-2021 school year, the district serves 26,121 students, [2] [3] making it the second largest in Wisconsin. It has 52 schools, including 32 elementary schools (grades K-5), 12 middle schools (grades 6–8), and 6 high schools.
The school was originally built in 1966 but received a major addition in 1967 because the school's population was higher than expected. The A-Wing housed the senior high and B-Wing the junior high. It was not until the 1970s that Thomas Jefferson Middle School (now Ezekiel Gillespie) was built. A fieldhouse was added in 1992.