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In 1969, Lyman High School moved to a newly constructed state-of-the-art campus approximately 1/4 mile to the north, while the former Lyman campus became R. T. Milwee Junior High School, named after Rayburn T. Milwee, Sr., a former Lyman teacher (1939-1949), Lyman principal (1949-1952) and Superintendent of Seminole County Schools (1952-1967).
Columbia Township Auditorium, also known as Township Auditorium, is a historic auditorium located in Columbia, South Carolina. It was built in 1930 (94 years ago), and is a three-story, brick building with a Doric order columned portico in the Georgian Revival style.
The school's auditorium is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [7] The University of South Carolina's Museum of Education hosts a web exhibition on the high school and its participation in a 1940 Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools for Negroes’ Secondary School Study. [8]
Columbia High School was originally housed in the former Columbia Female Academy (established 1816) at 1323 Washington Street at the corner with Marion Street. This building was leased to the Richland County Commissioners of Schools in 1884. The school became Columbia's first public high school in 1895 as the Washington Street School. The ...
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It was open to students regardless of religion, and incorporated by the state of South Carolina. [6] The successor school, Cardinal Newman, was opened in 1961. [ 7 ] The school moved to a 50-acre campus in unincorporated Richland County near Sesquicentennial State Park in spring 2013 [ 8 ] and began instruction there in January 2016.
Williams–Brice Stadium, popularly known as "Willy B", is a football stadium located in Columbia, South Carolina.It serves primarily as the home of the South Carolina Gamecocks football team, but has also been the site of many concerts, state high school football championships, and various other events, including the annual Palmetto Capital City Classic between the Benedict Tigers and the ...
D. Leon McCormac served as the first principal of Dreher from 1938 to 1947. In 1938, the third high school in Columbia was completed. It was built at 701 Adger Road on a ten-acre lot, which was once part of Governor Wade Hampton's estate, purchased for $25,000 from Burrell D. Manning.