Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cobblestone School was founded in 1983, teaching children between ages 4½ and 12 years in grades pre-kindergarten through six. In 1999, grades seven and eight were added, but then in the 2010–2011 school year grades seven and eight were phased out due to low enrollment. In 2015, Cobblestone School closed due to lack of funding. [1]
Wallington Cobblestone Schoolhouse District No. 8 is a historic one room school located at Sodus in Wayne County, New York, United States. The Federal style, cobblestone building is a one-story, three-bay, center hall gable roofed structure with a louvered, gable roofed bell tower .
Loretta Ford, 104, American nurse, dean of the University of Rochester School of Nursing (1972–1985) and co-founder of the first nurse practitioner graduate program. [37] Gallo Blue Chip, 28, American racehorse. [38] Boris Ćiro Gašparac , 79, Croatian musician and singer. [39] Roberto Giusti, 71, Venezuelan journalist (El Nacional, El ...
This is a list of closed secondary schools in New York. Also see Category:Defunct schools in New York (state). Grover Cleveland High School, Buffalo (former NCES ID 360585000309 [1]) Edison Technical High School, Rochester. Now home to several smaller specialized schools. Some former schools at this campus are listed below.
Schoolhouse No. 6 is a historic one room school building located at Guilderland in Albany County, New York. It was built in 1860 and is a one-story cobblestone building built of coursed cobblestones with smooth ashlar quoins. It features a curvilinear hipped roof topped by an open bell tower. Also on the property is a contributing privy. [2]
Hogan was born on March 11, 1916, in Lima, New York. He attended St. Andrew's Seminary and St. Bernard's Seminary in Rochester. He was ordained to the priesthood by Bishop James Edward Kearney for the Diocese of Rochester on June 6, 1942. Hogan received a master's degree from Canisius College in Buffalo.
Roe Cobblestone Schoolhouse is a historic one room school located at Butler in Wayne County, New York. The cobblestone building is a one-story, 28 feet long by 22 feet deep, three bay wide structure. It was built about 1820 and is constructed of irregularly shaped, multi-colored, field cobbles.
The new school was built in 1832 of local cobblestone, as was common in the area, on land across the road from the old school building. [2] The new building had 913 square feet of space and continued serving as a school until 1944, when centralization caused Gaines District No. 2 to be consolidated into the Albion Central School District. [3]