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In October 2012 plans were announced to merge Walker High School and L. B. Landry High School into the new Landry Building and the campus would take the name of Walker High. [7] Effective in the fall of 2013, the school merged on the rebuilt L. B. Landry High School campus. O. Perry Walker High School notable alumni (1970–2012)
NOPS was wholly controlled by the OPSB before Hurricane Katrina and was the New Orleans area's largest school district before Katrina devastated the city on August 29, 2005, damaging or destroying more than 100 of the district's 128 school buildings. NOPS served approximately 65,000 students pre-Katrina.
It housed the Morris Jeff Community School, and after that one moved out in 2015, Bricolage Academy of New Orleans. [34] Bricolage moved down Esplanade Avenue to the former John McDonogh High School campus in the fall of 2018. New Harmony High School is now housed in the former Our Lady of the Rosary school buildings.
The school originally opened as George Washington Carver Senior High School in 1961. [3] It was a public high school operated by New Orleans Public Schools, then Recovery School District starting in 2005. [4] Prior to Hurricane Katrina the school had about 1,300 students. After Katrina, the original building was demolished. [5]
In July 2018, John F. Kennedy High School reopened in the former Greater Gentilly and Lake Area New Tech Early College High School building and was run by the New Beginnings Schools Foundation. [2] [3] In July 2019, it was announced that The New Beginnings Foundation would relinquish control of John F. Kennedy following a grades changing ...
The school's building was built in 1937 and was previously the L. E. Rabouin Memorial Trades School, later named the L. E. Rabouin Vocational High School and then L. E. Rabouin Career Magnet School. The Louisiana Recovery School District took over managing the building and former school after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
New Orleans City Hall may refer to: Gallier Hall (1853–1950s) New Orleans City Hall at Duncan Plaza, see New Orleans Central Business District § Government and infrastructure (1950s–present)
In 2016, KIPP New Orleans Schools, a charter school operator, opened KIPP Booker T. Washington High School in the Carter G. Woodson building at 2514 Third Street in New Orleans. [9] In 2019, the school moved into a new building constructed on the same site of the original Booker T. Washington High School.