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Maud W. Gordon Elementary School (Unzoned relief school) Buchanan H. Grimes Elementary School (Houston) - The previous building was where Grimes Park is now, while the final building, opposite of the park, opened in 1959. From 1989 to 2000 the principal was Kathleen Morgan. Circa 1991 it had 529 students, but this declined to 380 in 2011.
John F. Ward Elementary School [8] G. H. Whitcomb Elementary School [9] Cypress Fairbanks Independent School District. Berta Dean Middle School [10] Bane Elementary School [11] Lillie Holbrook Elementary School [12] Fort Bend Independent School District. Willowridge High School; Christa McAuliffe Middle School [13] Blue Ridge Elementary School [14]
Meyerland was one of the first deed-restricted communities in the City of Houston. [10] Many white residents were moving away from the Third Ward area, so many houses in Meyerland were sold prior to construction. [11] On Memorial Day, May 30, 1961, the "Hero Tree" was dedicated as a living memorial to Capt. Gary L. Herod for his heroism.
Grades 3-5. Central Intermediate School; Grades 1-2. Tanglewood Elementary School By 2015 the school had temporary classrooms for first and second grade students. [6] By 2016 Tanglewood Elementary had been damaged by a summertime flood; it was the only Central public school damaged by the floodwaters even though the event affected much of Central. [10]
Sandra Holbert, better known as "Ms. Sandra" before her retirement from Knox County Schools food service, stands in the Carter Elementary School cafeteria, which is being named in her honor.
Zoned high schools James E. Taylor High School (Unincorporated Harris County) (Est. 1979) . 1994-1996 National Blue Ribbon School [2]; Mayde Creek High School (Unincorporated Harris County) (Est. 1984)
This page was last edited on 16 February 2025, at 01:46 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Houston ISD's administration building, which opened in 1969 and served in that capacity from July of that year to March 2006 was the 201,150-square-foot (18,687 m 2) Hattie Mae White Administration Building, at 3830 Richmond Avenue. [132] It was designed by Neuhaus & Taylor in a New Brutalist style. [136]