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[3] Beginning in 1985, secondary school students (grades 7-12) from Kendleton ISD attended campuses in the neighboring Lamar Consolidated Independent School District. [4] In 1995 the Texas Historical Commission established a historical marker at the school site. By that year Powell Point School became an elementary school. [3]
It was listed on county maps in the 1930s and early 1990s, even though it joined the Kendleton ISD. [2] Today, Powell Point is served by the Lamar Consolidated Independent School District (LCISD). [3] Students are zoned to Beasley Elementary School in Beasley, [4] Wright Junior High School (grades 6-8), [5] and Randle High School. [6]
In 1985 LCISD began serving secondary school students in the KISD territory, while primary school students went to Powell Point. [20] On March 25, 2010, Texas Education Agency (TEA) Commissioner Robert Scott announced that he was closing the Kendleton Independent School District. The closing is effective July 1, 2010.
Beginning in 1985, LCISD began serving middle and high school students from the Kendleton Independent School District (KISD)'s boundaries. [6] KISD and its one school, Powell Point Elementary, were merged into Lamar CISD on July 1, 2010. KISD ceased operations on that date and LCISD began serving elementary students from the former KISD. [7]
Pohl, James W. (1989), The Battle of San Jacinto, Texas State Historical Association, ISBN 978-0-87611-084-3; Pamela A. Puryear and Nath Winfield, Jr., Sandbars and Sternwheelers: Steam Navigation on the Brazos (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1976) Clarence Wharton, Wharton's History of Fort Bend County (San Antonio: Naylor, 1939)
State Antiquities Landmark, Recorded Texas Historic Landmark: 2: Henry G. and Annie B. Green House: Henry G. and Annie B. Green House: September 18, 1996 .5 mi SE of old US 59 and TX 118: Kendleton: Demolished in 2018. 3
On February 11, 1858, the Seventh Texas Legislature approved O.B. 102, an act to establish the University of Texas, which set aside $100,000 in United States bonds toward construction of the state's first publicly funded university [15] (the $100,000 was an allocation from the $10 million the state received pursuant to the Compromise of 1850 ...
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