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Greenfield High School, also known as Riley Elementary School, was a historic school building located at Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana. It was designed by the architectural firm of Wing & Mahurin and built in 1895–1896. It was a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, U-shaped, Romanesque Revival style stone-faced building with a 5 + 1 ⁄ 2-story central ...
It consists of four elementary schools (Grades K - 3), two intermediate schools (Grades 4 - 6), one junior high school (Grades 7 - 8), and one high school (Grades 9 - 12). Greenfield Central Jr. High School was built in the late 2000s to accommodate Greenfield's rapidly growing population. Greenfield-Central High School also underwent ...
Greenfield High School: April 22, 1982 (#82000039) June 18, 1986: North and Pennsylvania Sts. Greenfield: Destroyed by fire on April 30, 1985 [7] 2: New Palestine School: June 14, 1991 (#91000791) March 17, 1992: Larrabee St. at jct. with Depot St. New Palestine
Greenfield Courthouse Square Historic District is a national historic district located at Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana, United States. The district encompasses 72 contributing buildings and 1 contributing object in the central business district of Greenfield that developed between about 1835 and 1935.
Greenfield School (Greenfield, Indiana), an historic building in Hancock County, Indiana Greenfield Elementary School (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) Greenfield School (West Allis, Wisconsin)
Greenfield Residential Historic District is a national historic district located at Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana. The district encompasses 523 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 15 contributing structures in a predominantly residential section of Greenfield.
In 2019 the Indiana State Board of Accounts found that administrators of the GCSC received $651,000 more than they were supposed to, and as a result started a criminal investigation. [2] In 2019 the school district revised its administrative structure. [3]
MCCSC operates fourteen elementary schools, three middle schools, four high schools and one vocational school. In addition, they offer several adult and alternative education facilities. MCCSC is governed by a board of seven trustees elected to staggered four-year terms on a subdistrict basis within the school district. [2]