Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The second Martinsville High School building was completed in 1939 on Cleveland Avenue, and it was used until the newer building was completed in the late 1960s. The last graduating class at the older building was in 1968. Margaret Shumate Hadden, class of 1941, often spoke about her days there at the older building. [6] ".
Virginia Beach City. Bayside High School. Cape Henry Collegiate School. Catholic High School. Chesapeake Bay Academy. First Colonial High School. Frank W. Cox High School. Floyd E. Kellam High School. Green Run High School.
Carlisle School. Carlisle School is a private, co-educational, college preparatory school located in the Axton community of Martinsville, Virginia, United States. Established in 1968, Carlisle serves day school students in grades Pre- K–12. [5][6] The school is non-profit and has a board of directors that oversee it. [7]
Martinsville, Virginia. Martinsville is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. As of the 2020 census, the population was 13,485. [4] A community of both Southside and Southwest Virginia, it is the county seat of Henry County, [5] although the two are separate jurisdictions.
The salaries totaled to $8,453,778.87 for 169 district employees. Of the 169, only two district employees made over $100,000 and a total of 12 employees made over $80,000. The district also spent ...
The Piedmont Governor's School for Mathematics, Science, and Technology is one of Virginia's 18 state-initiated magnet Governor's Schools. It is a half-day school program where 11th and 12th grade students take advanced classes in the morning (receiving their remaining classes from their home high school.) Four classes are to be taken at the ...
Magna Vista H.S. Magna Vista High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school in Henry County, Virginia. Named for the Magna Vista plantation which occupied the land where it sits, [ 4 ] it is approximately three miles west of the town of Ridgeway, Virginia and ten miles (16 km) south of the city of Martinsville, Virginia.
In 1871, he reported there were 19 one-room schools operating for white children and 10 operating for black children. These schools were in session for about four and a half months. In 1901 it was reported that there were 75 schools for white children and 32 for the black children. Schools at this time went for five and a half months.