Showing posts with label School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label School. Show all posts

August 23, 2012

PS#12

PS#12

In the late 1980’s, the School District of Philadelphia shut down PS#12 which is located in a neighborhood of North Philadelphia. The school was briefly run by the Pan-African Studies Community Education Program (PASCEP) which offered things like daycare, GEDs, and adult education. Since then, the building stands there, covered in graffiti with many broken windows, looming over the nearby Richard Allen Projects.

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August 22, 2012

PS#8

PS#8 1912 
 THE HISTORY:
As one of the oldest high schools in Philadelphia, the original Thomas A. Edison High School building was opened in 1890 as the all male Northeast Manual Training High School located at 8th Street and Lehigh Avenue. Eventually the school became Northeast High School in 1905 when the Northeast Manual Training High School moved to a new location and changed its name to Northeast High School for Boys. The auditorium was added in 1916 and in 1936 vocational education shops and many regular classrooms were added to the original building. Later, the school was named the Julia De Burgos Bilingual Magnet Middle School after the famous poet.

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PS#8 2010

August 15, 2012

School for Girls

School for Girls


The College for Girls was founded in 1890 and in 1907 the School moved to its final home on 22 acres in Dutchess County, New York. In 1907 the school had an enrollment of 120 students and a faculty of 29. Originally named The Finishing School for Girls, the course of study was six years (four years of high school and two years of higher study).In the early 20th century the school discontinued high school courses and became a junior college only. The two-year curriculum continued until the mid 1970s, when College began awarding four-year Bachelor's degrees. Generations of young women from prominent American families attended The College over its 90 year history.

Majors of study included art, fashion design, music, modern languages, literature, history, dance and domestic science. Activities at Bennett included gymnastics, riding, golf, tennis, field hockey and tobogganing.

At the time of its closing, enrollment was around 300 students.

With the growing popularity of coeducation in the 1970s, The College found itself struggling to survive. An attempt to upgrade facilities and convert to a four-year college in the mid 1970s left the already troubled college in financial distress. In 1977 the trustees attempted to reach a collaboration agreement with Briarcliff College, a junior women's college in nearby Briarcliff Manor which was also struggling with low enrollment. The plan did not work, however, and Briarcliff instead merged with Pace University in 1977 after both Briarcliff and The College for Girls entered bankruptcy.

In 1978 the college closed its doors for good.


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