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Pages in category "Schools in Chattanooga, Tennessee" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Hamilton County Schools (or Hamilton County Department of Education) is the school district that serves Hamilton County, Tennessee, USA. After a 1995 referendum, the then-separate Chattanooga City Schools district was merged into the county district in 1997. [2] About 2,300 high school seniors graduated from the system in May 2011. [3]
The Chattanooga School for the Arts & Sciences is a K–12 magnet school in Chattanooga, Tennessee. It was opened in 1986 in the former Wyatt Hall building which was used as a high school until 1983. The building was designed in Georgian Revival style [2] by Reuben H. Hunt, a Chattanooga architect.
Howard was the first public school in the Chattanooga area. [1] The name is drawn from Civil War General Oliver O. Howard, as is Howard University.The school was founded under the leadership of Reverend E. O. Tade. Reverend Tade worked extensively in establishing a ministry in the Chattanooga region, being employed by the American Missionary Association and the Freedman's Aid Commission. [2]
Chattanooga High School was founded in the fall of 1874 in Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee. [1] The school, sometimes called City High School , has evolved into two high schools: the Chattanooga High School Center for Creative Arts and the Chattanooga School for the Arts & Sciences .
The Cadek Conservatory of Music was founded in Chattanooga in 1904 by Joseph Ottokar Cadek, a Prague-born violinist. It became affiliated with the University of Chattanooga in 1935. In 2017, the Conservatory formed a new partnership with Girls Preparatory School, and relocated from Cadek Hall, on UTC's campus, to GPS's campus.
Tennessee Temple Academy was established in 1951 as a Southern Baptist elementary school that included kindergarten and grades 1 through 5. It enrolled 132 students that year. High school and middle school programs were added in 1971, and the school achieved its peak enrollment of about 1,000 students in 1980. [1]
St. Andrew’s-Sewanee School is a private, coeducational, Episcopal, boarding and day college preparatory school serving 250 students in grades six through twelve.It is located in Sewanee, Tennessee on the Cumberland Plateau between Nashville and Chattanooga and adjacent to the University of the South, which is also affiliated with the Episcopal Church.