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The Huntsville Campus opened in 2006. The Sparkman Building was originally a Chrysler electronics factory. The building was purchased by Calhoun Community College for $4.5 million, which included $2 million for a 5-year cleanup of the site. [1] Construction of the Math, Science, and CIS building began in 2014, and was opened in 2016. [2]
Drake State was founded in 1961 as the Huntsville State Vocational Technical College by the Alabama State Board of Education, and initially offered courses to African-American students. Classes commenced in September 1962 with 27 students enrolled in three programs: brick masonry, cosmetology and auto mechanics.
The first public school for African Americans in Huntsville, it was named for William Hooper Councill who founded Lincoln School in Huntsville and pushed for its expansion into the state normal school it became in 1875, leading to its becoming Alabama A&M University. [2] The high school has several prominent alumni.
Central Texas College was established by a vote of the citizens of Central Texas in 1965 to serve the western section of Bell County, Texas and Coryell County.The campus was constructed on more than 500 acres of land donated by Fort Hood (now Fort Cavazos) between Killeen and Copperas Cove.
CTC (band), a Romanian hip hop band; Canadian Tire Centre, a multi-purpose indoor arena in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Canberra Theatre Centre, a performing arts centre in Canberra, Australia; Central de Trabajadores de Cuba, the Workers' Central Union of Cuba; Centro de Tratamento de Correspondência, letter centre of Post of Portugal
The Alabama School of Cyber Technology and Engineering (ASCTE) is an American high school located in Huntsville, Alabama. [2] [3] Founded in 2018, it is the first tuition-free [4] residential high school focused on the integration of cyber technology and engineering across all academic disciplines. [3]
Tudor Grange Academy, Kingshurst (previously CTC Kingshurst Academy) is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Kingshurst, Solihull, England. It was the only City Technology College to offer post-16 students the opportunity to study the International Baccalaureate instead of A-levels .
Locations included the original CTC home, the "Lake View" building at 116 S. Michigan Avenue. At some point before 1918 day classes were held in new Chicago “Tech” Building at 2721 S. Michigan Avenue. By 1928, the school was in a new two-story building at the corner of 26th and Indiana Streets.