Homewood City Schools: Difference between revisions

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== Superintendents ==
== Superintendents ==
* [[G. Virgil Nunn]] ([[1970]]–?)
* [[G. Virgil Nunn]], 1970–?
* [[George French]] (?&ndash;[[1978]]) <!-- Middle initial C. -->
* [[George C. French]], ?–1978
** [[Edna Snow]] (interim)
** [[Edna Snow]] (interim)
* [[Michael Gross]] ([[1978]]&ndash;[[1985]])
* [[Michael Gross]], 1978–1985
* [[Robert Bumpus]] ([[1985]]&ndash;[[1991]])
* [[Robert Bumpus]], 1985–1991
** [[Edna Snow]] (interim)
** [[Edna Snow]] (interim)
* [[Byron Nelson]] (?&ndash;[[1998]])
* [[Byron Nelson]], ?–1998
* [[Jodi Newton]] ([[1998]]&ndash;[[2008]])
* [[Jodi Newton]], 1998–2008
* [[Bill Cleveland]] ([[2008]]&ndash;present)
* [[Bill Cleveland]], 2008–present


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 10:56, 20 June 2019

Homewood City Schools is an independent school system established by the City of Homewood in 1970. The system currently operates five schools and has a student population of approximately 3,200.

Even prior to creating its own school system, the citizens of Homewood were dedicated to their local schools. Hall-Kent Elementary School was established in 1887, well before the city was incorporated. Shades Cahaba High School was established in 1920, later becoming Shades Cahaba Elementary School when Jefferson County replaced it with Shades Valley High School. Homewood Junior High School followed shortly thereafter in the 1950s.

On December 22, 1969, the Homewood City Council established the Homewood Board of Education, which would assume authority on July 1, 1970. The initial board consisted of Dr. Leslie Wright, Madison W. O'Kelley, Jack R. Gurley, Richard T. Ownes, and Mamie Foster. They hired G. Virgil Nunn as the first superintendent.

Because Shades Valley was not in the city limits, the system did not have a high school when the city broke away from the county's system in 1970. Instead, students were allowed to continue attending Shades Valley if they paid tuition. In 1971, a five-mill tax was passed by voters to pay for a city high school, which opened at the end of the following year.

Board of Education

The Homewood Board of Education offices are located in the Hollywood neighborhood at 7 Hollywood Boulevard, next to Shades Cahaba. The current board members are:

The Homewood Board of Education Building, completed in 2013, was designed by Williams-Blackstock Architects. It won a Merit Award from AIA Birmingham in 2015.

Schools

Homewood's school system consists of three elementary schools (K-5) which feed into a single middle school (6-8) and high school (9-12).

Superintendents

References

  • Summe, Sheryl Spradling. (2001). Homewood: The Life of a City. Homewood, AL: Friends of the Homewood Public Library.

External links