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The Albion Central School District is a public school district in New York State that serves approximately 2,600 children in the village of Albion; most of the towns of Albion, Barre, Carlton, and Gaines; small parts of the towns of Kendall, Murray, and Ridgeway in Orleans County; and portions of the town of Elba in Genesee County, with an operating budget of $36 million.
Charles D'Amico High School, also known as Albion High School, is a secondary school located in Albion, New York which educates students in grades nine through twelve. The school is named for longtime principal Charles C. D'Amico.
St. Francis de Sales School (Toledo, Ohio) St. John's Jesuit High School and Academy; St. Ursula Academy (Toledo, Ohio) Scott High School (Ohio) Spencer-Sharples Local School District; Start High School (Toledo, Ohio)
Around 1962 with the annexing of most of the township into Toledo city, the name became Washington Local School District. Throughout the 1960s and 70s, there were 13 elementary schools, grades K-6, two junior high schools (Washington and Jefferson), both with grades 7 and 8, and Whitmer High School with grade 9-12 district..
Toledo Public Schools (TPS), serves 23,324 students (2018-2019 school year) [16] and is the fourth largest district in the state. Since 2013, TPS has experienced growth in student enrollment from 21,353 students to 23,324 for the 2018-2019 school year.
St. John's was founded as St. John's College by the Jesuits in 1898 in downtown Toledo, at 807 Superior St. Built in 1899 and 1909, it was demolished in 1976 and 1978. [4] It was a liberal arts college with a business administration program and a law school that subsequently became a foundation unit of the current University of Toledo College ...
The Three Rivers Athletic Conference was an Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) high school athletic conference that began athletic competition in 2011 and lasted until 2023 with 10 high schools from Northwest Ohio, seven of which were from the Toledo metropolitan area, and one each from the cities of Findlay, Fremont and Lima. [1]
The civic center's first structure was constructed in 1926. In 1929, architect Graham H. Woolfall presented Acting Supervising Architect of the U.S. Treasury James A. Wetmore's design for the spacious four-story United States Courthouse and Custom House to be located within the civic center. The new federal building would replace the ...