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Public School Number Four (later renamed Annie Lytle Elementary School) is an abandoned elementary school in Jacksonville, Florida. It was first established in 1918 as Riverside Grammar School and was Duval County's fourth public school house. Public School Number Four was designated a historic landmark by the Jacksonville City Council in 2000. [1]
The Jacksonville Center for the Performing Arts (JCPA) (originally the Civic Auditorium and previously known as the Times Union Center) is a performing arts center located in Jacksonville, Florida. Situated along the Riverbank, the venue is known as the First Coast ’s "premiere riverfront entertainment facility".
A paranormal debunker arrives at a boys' boarding school to disprove alleged hauntings. [67] 2012 The Moth Diaries: Mary Harron: A female boarding school student suspects a new peer is a vampire. [68] 2015 The Blackcoat's Daughter: Oz Perkins: Two young women encounter a mysterious demonic force while alone at their boarding school during a ...
The Five Points Theatre, formerly known as Sun-Ray Cinema, Riverside Theater and 5 Points Theatre, is a historic two-screen movie theater in Jacksonville, Florida. [2] The first theater in Florida equipped to show talking pictures, it opened in March 1927 in the Five Points district of the Riverside and Avondale neighborhood.
Combined middle school and high school that serves the westernmost portion of Duval County Darnell-Cookman Middle/High School of the Medical Arts: 1,130: 6-12: Davis, Paul: Vikings: Beginning with the 2008-09 school year, Darnell-Cookman is transitioning from a middle school to a 6-11 (later 6-12) school. Englewood High School: 1,798: 9-12 ...
The school opened in 1922 during segregation as a primary school for African American students. The school is named after a local civil rights activist, Douglas Anderson. In 1985, the school was renovated into a magnet high school specializing in performing, visual and language arts. [2] A historical marker commemorates its history.
The character returned in the 2001 film Elvira's Haunted Hills. The show was revived in 2010 as Elvira's Movie Macabre, in which Elvira hosted public domain films. This revival aired on This TV until 2011. Elvira returned as a horror hostess in 2014 with 13 Nights of Elvira, a 13-episode series produced by Hulu.
Upon opening in 1971, Ed White took overflow students from Forrest High School and Paxon High School, also on the Westside. Like all high schools in Duval county, it served students in the 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. In 1991 the Duval County School Board implemented a change in grade distribution that affected nearly all schools in the county.