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As a part of the New Orleans Public Schools, Lawless opened its doors to African American students on January 27, 1964, as historically the first high school in the Lower Ninth Ward. [1] Prior to Hurricane Katrina on August 29, 2005, the school had about 900 students. The campus was severely damaged by Katrina.
Lake Area New Tech Early College High School; L.B. Landry High School; L. E. Rabouin Career Magnet School; L. E. Rabouin Vocational High School; L. E. Rabouin Memorial Trades School; Marion Abramson High School; Martin Behrman High School; McDonogh 35 Senior High School; Mid-City Baptist School; Miller-McCoy Academy; New Orleans Academy
Alcee Fortier High School, New Orleans; Alfred Lawless High School, New Orleans; Alfred Wettermark High School. Boyce; Alma Brown High School, Oberlin; Algiers Technology Academy, New Orleans; Allen High School, Oakdale; Alto High School, Alto; American Academy, Bogalusa; Amy Bradford Ware High School, Opelousas [1] Andrew Jackson High School ...
Saint Mary's Academy - New Orleans - Has separate PK -7 girls' school, grade 4-7 boys' school - and 8-12 girls' school St. Thérèse Academy for Exceptional Learners - Metairie - Established 2019, replacing Holy Rosary School and Our Lady of Divine Providence School; it occupies the former campus of the latter school.
Orleans Parish School Board, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stated in 1962 that Franklin was "one of the finest schools in the country for superior students" and suggested that African American students who met the school's exacting admissions requirements be admitted. [16]
In the 2024-25 school year, OPSB currently governs 67 of the 74 public schools located in Orleans Parish including 1 direct-run school (The Leah Chase School) and 65 Charter Schools operated by 31 non-profit Charter Management Organizations.
He had been living with his grandmother but he ended up in the Covenant House shelter before his senior year of high school. Despite the housing insecurity, Hogan pushed through to finish with a 3 ...
Local Black and White leaders felt there was a need to develop a larger, more notable African-American institution of higher learning in New Orleans and the greater South. Due to economic hardships and rounds of negotiations between the two institutions, Straight College and New Orleans University chartered Dillard University on June 6, 1930. [2]