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Franklin Delano Roosevelt High School is a coeducational public high school in New York City, located at 5800 20th Avenue in the borough of Brooklyn. It is a zoned/public high school, with an enrollment of approximately 3,700 students, encompassing grades 9–12. In total, the school includes 280,717 sq feet of class space, gyms, cafeteria, and ...
In the 1980s the diocese had about 102 schools. From the mid-2000s to 2019 the diocese had closed 45 schools. By 2019 36 remained. [7] Three grade schools were scheduled to close in 2019, and that year another two grade schools were to merge. [8]
Named for President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who grew up in Hyde Park, the school serves about 1,300 students in grades 9 to 12 in the Hyde Park Central School District. Census-designated places (counted in New York as Hamlets ) in the school district, of which Roosevelt is the sole comprehensive high school, include Haviland , Hyde Park , Marist ...
Brooklyn Frontiers High School: K423 Public, transfer Brooklyn Generation School (South Shore Educational Campus) K566 Public Brooklyn High School for Law and Technology K498 Public Brooklyn High School for Leadership and Community Service K616 Public, transfer Brooklyn High School of the Arts: K656 Public
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Cut-off by the Bay Ridge Branch of the LIRR between 16th and 17th Avenues and by FDR High School between 19th and 20th Avenues. Carries a portion of the eastbound B11 bus route from 1st to 2nd Avenues. 59th Street 2nd Avenue Dahill Road 3.12 miles 1 West The 59th Street Station is located on 4th Avenue. 60th Street
Abraham Lincoln High School (disambiguation) Lincoln High School (disambiguation), includes some schools that may not be named after the president; Lincoln Junior High School, Bentonville, Arkansas; Lincoln Center Institute, the education division of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
It was a comprehensive high school. Eastern District High School operated from 1900 to mid-1996, when it was closed because of poor academic performance. [2] [3] [4] After Eastern District High School closed, the building was rebranded in late 1996 as the Grand Street Campus, with several smaller new schools operating within the same facilities.