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Green is Southwest Allen County Schools; brown/purple Fort Wayne Community Schools; yellow East Allen County Schools. Northwest Allen County Schools is a public school district that serves Lake, Eel River, and Perry Townships in Allen County, Indiana. It is commonly referred to as NACS because of its respective initials.
Canterbury School is an independent, college preparatory day school for students aged 2 through Grade 12. The school is located in Fort Wayne, Indiana (U.S.). As of 2024, Canterbury School is ranked as the second-best private school in Indiana, and the best in the Fort Wayne area.
Homestead won “High School TV Station of the Year” at Indiana Association of School Broadcasters (IASB) in 2020, 2021 and 2022. WCYT is the school's student-run, not-for-profit radio station. It has been broadcasting in the city of Fort Wayne since 1995. It features indie-rock music on a 24/7, 365 day basis, along with occasional talk shows ...
In 1982, South Side was elected to permanent membership in the College Board – one of only thirteen Indiana high schools at that time to be so honored. Seven principals have served the school in the past: Robert Harris, 1922–1926; R. Nelson Snider, 1926–1963; Jack E. Weicker, 1963–1990; Jennifer Manth, 1990–2001; Thomas Smith, 2001 ...
Booming enrollment from the suburban sprawl of nearby Fort Wayne into Perry Township caused NACS to build Carroll Middle School (CMS) adjacent to the main high school in 1984. By the fall of 2004 as enrollment continued to increase, the school district built other middle schools (including a new Carroll Middle School), and the old CMS was ...
Located in the southside of Fort Wayne, Indiana, Bishop Luers is owned and operated by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend. [3] The school was founded in 1958 by the Franciscan Fathers of the Saint John the Baptist Province in Cincinnati, Ohio, along with the Sisters of Saint Francis Province in Mishawaka, Indiana.
The high school undertook steps to receive accreditation from the state of Indiana in 1938. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] By 1947, increased enrollment had strained the 300-student capacity of the building, so the association constructed a new classroom building on 1.3 acres (0.53 ha) in the southeast corner of the college campus.
The school was made up of students from Central Catholic High School, Saint Hedwig School, Saint Joseph's Academy, and South Bend Catholic High School. Contributions from South Bend and Mishawaka parishioners enabled building the school on 5.7 acres (23,000 m 2) of land donated to the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend by the Brothers of Holy Cross.