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Austin-East High School, Knoxville est. 1951; Bearden High School, Knoxville est. 1939; Carter High School, Strawberry Plains est. 1915; Career Magnet Academy, located at Pellissippi State Community College; Central High School, Knoxville est. 1906, relocated 1971; Farragut High School, Farragut est. 1904; Fulton High School, Knoxville est. 1951
At the Payne Avenue location, the school was renamed Knoxville Colored High School. By 1928, that school building had become overcrowded due to a growing African American population, and the school moved to a new location on Vine Street, once again using the Austin High School name. [3] William A. Robinson became school principal in 1928.
The magnet was made of 18 turns of bare copper wire (insulated wire had not yet been invented). [1] William Sturgeon (/ ˈ s t ɜːr dʒ ə n /; 22 May 1783 – 4 December 1850) was an English electrical engineer and inventor who made the first electromagnet and the first practical electric motor.
Her salary for the 2024-2025 school year will be about $126,500, Harrington said. Her previous salary as principal was a little over $124,000. The superintendent has not named a new principal for ...
Charles W. Cansler (1871–1953), Austin High School principal, civil rights advocate and author; William Henderson Franklin (1852–1935), educator, minister, journalist, and founder of Swift Memorial College [9] [10] [11] Thomas William Humes (1815–1892), president of the University of Tennessee (1865–1883)
Bearden High School is a Knox County, Tennessee, high school located in the Bearden area in the city of Knoxville. [2]The school was founded in 1939. [3] It was named for the family of Marcus De LaFayette Bearden, a farmer who served as a captain in the Union Army during the Civil War.
Sue Broder, a parent of two students who graduated from MLK in 2006 and 2011, remembers the district trying to remove grades 7-8 in 2004, 2005, 2007 and 2013.
Knox County Schools, the unified Knox County, Tennessee school district, operates the school. The school serves the majority of Farragut, portions south of Interstate 40. [2] The original Farragut High School, built in 1904, occupied a strip of land adjacent to Kingston Pike, becoming the first consolidated high school in Knox County.