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Originally called "the schoolhouse," the "Cedar Rapids graded school," and the "second ward school", it received its current name in 1875 when all the Cedar Rapids schools were named for presidents. The oldest building was called Washington School. In 1887, Abbie S. Abbott began her 34-year tenure as Washington High School principal. [3]
The Outlook. Affiliation. Mississippi Valley Conference. Website. jefferson.cr.k12.ia.us. Thomas Jefferson High School is a public high school in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It is the eighth largest high school in Iowa. The school's mascot is Jeffy the J-Hawk and the official school colors are Columbia Blue and white.
Website. crschools.us. The Cedar Rapids Community School District (CRCSD) is a public school district located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It has the second largest enrollment in the state of Iowa. [2] The district has 21 elementary schools, 6 middle schools, 4 high schools, and 1 alternative high school. [1] The district is in Linn County.
Linn County. [edit] Alburnett Junior-Senior High School, Alburnett. Center Point-Urbana High School, Center Point. Central City High School, Central City. Linn-Mar High School, Marion. Lisbon High School, Lisbon. Marion High School, Marion.
Blair Oaks High School. Calvary Lutheran High School - Lutheran (co-ed) Capital City High School. Central Baptist Christian Academy - Baptist (co-ed) Helias Catholic High School - Roman Catholic (co-ed) Jefferson City High School /Simonsen 9th Grade Center. Lighthouse Preparatory Academy - nonsectarian (co-ed)
Dowling Catholic High School is a Catholic secondary school in West Des Moines, Iowa, within the Diocese of Des Moines. As of the 2013-14 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,431 students and 94.6 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 15.1:1. The school's enrollment was 81.2% White, 4.1% Black, 10.2% ...
The location of present-day Cedar Rapids was in the territory of the Fox and Sac tribes at the time of European American settlement.. The first settler on the site of the future city was Osgood Shepherd, who built a log cabin (which he called a tavern) in 1837 or 1838 next to the Cedar River (then known as the Red Cedar) at what is now the corner of First Avenue and First Street Northeast.
In 1984, there were 437 school districts in the state that operated high schools. [6] In 1990 the total number of school districts was 430. [5] In fall 1995 the number of school districts operating high schools was down to 353, and in 1995 670 was the median enrollment K-12 of an Iowa school district. [6]