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Marple Newtown School District (MNSD) is a public school district which serves Newtown Township and Marple Township in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. Marple Newtown School District encompasses approximately 21 square miles (54 km 2). According to 2000 federal census data, it serves a resident population of 35,437.
Marple Newtown School District: This district’s nondiscrimination policy on transgender and gender expansive students directs teachers and other school staff to keep information about a young ...
Newtown Township lies entirely within the Marple Newtown School District together with Marple Township. The district has four elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school. Culbertson Elementary School is the only one of the four elementary Schools which serves residents of and resides in Newtown Township. Marple Newtown Senior ...
Fourth Street Meeting House and School 1763-1764 [25] 1859 [25] A two-story brick building, "76 feet front on Fourth street, 42 feet deep." [25] Built beside the Friends Public School (for boys). A school for girls occupied the meeting house's second floor. [25] East side of Fourth Street, between Chestnut and Sansom Streets, Philadelphia: PAB [26]
The Marple Newtown School District is mourning the loss of one of their own after the flu claimed the life of an elementary student. Marple Newtown School District should be on 'high alert' after ...
The district has four elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school. Delaware County Community College, a public, two-year community college, is also located in Marple Township; this campus has a Media mailing address. [12] The township is also served by the Marple Public Library. St. Luke Greek Orthodox Church on N. Malin Road
Cardinal O'Hara High School is a coeducational Catholic high school of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. The school is named after John Francis O'Hara who was Roman Catholic Archbishop of Philadelphia from 1951 to 1960. It is located in Marple Township, Pennsylvania, and was officially opened for the first time in 1963.
The De Pere School District is proposing a capital referendum to address building issues. ... The board plans to vote at an Aug. 5 special meeting to approve that referendum resolution.