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Across Carter School Road is the Carter Football Field which is used for CHS home football games during the fall as well as home soccer games for both girls and boys teams. The baseball and softball facilities are located just west on Asheville Highway at Carter Park, owned by Knox County. The gym, connected to the arts building, plays host to ...
The district has 94 schools (including 51 elementary schools, 16 middle schools, 16 high schools, 11 special schools) with 8,339 employees serving approximately 60,500 students in the cities of Knoxville and Farragut as well as all other communities in the county.
It is instead a member of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association. Most of the base housing is in Kentucky, the school was originally on the Kentucky side of the base, and it is operated by the Kentucky District of the U.S. Department of Defense Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools, along with all other schools on Fort ...
Carter High School (Strawberry Plains, Tennessee) ... West High School (Knoxville, Tennessee) This page was last edited on 7 June 2023, at 21:42 (UTC). Text ...
Carter High School may refer to a number of high schools: Carter High School (Strawberry Plains, Tennessee) , in Knox County, Tennessee, United States Carter High School (South Africa) , in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
The course for Farragut High School students is modeled after one already being taught in Campbell county at the Campbell County Christian Learning Center. The board is set to vote at its 5 p.m ...
Carter has a Food City supermarket, a pharmacy and several dollar stores. [7]Plans for a mixed-use town centre in Carter have been proposed since 2001 by the Knoxville-Knox County Metropolitan Planning Commission to provide a community hub space for eastern Knox County as the Carter area's population grows.
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)