South Highland School: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with ":''This article is about the public school, for the private girls' school see South Highland School for Girls.'' {{Infobox Bham School |name =South Highland Scho...")
 
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[[Category:Birmingham schools]]
[[Category:Birmingham schools]]
[[Category:1880s buildings]]
[[Category:1880s buildings]]
[[Category:Magnolia Street]]
[[Category:Magnolia Avenue]]
[[Category:1964 disestablishments]]
[[Category:1964 disestablishments]]
[[Category:1960s demolitions]]
[[Category:1960s demolitions]]

Revision as of 11:55, 27 October 2015

This article is about the public school, for the private girls' school see South Highland School for Girls.
South Highland School
BCS small logo.png Birmingham City Schools
Years 1880s?
Location 2030 Magnolia Avenue, (map)
Five Points South
Grades ?
Principal ?
Enrollment ? ()
Colors
Mascot
Website

The South Highland School was a public school located at 2030 Magnolia Avenue on the corner of 21st Street South, built by the Town of Highland in the late 1880s and later taken over by Birmingham City Schools when the town was annexed into Birmingham in 1893.

The building was renovated with a new forced-air furnace in 1909. Miller & Martin were the architects for that work.

Virginia Durr was a pupil at South Highland School in the 1910s. Birmingham City Schools first implemented the platoon system at the school, then the largest elementary school in the city, in 1919.

The school closed in 1964 and was demolished in the next few years for construction of the Building Trades Tower apartments.

Principals

References

  • Weeks, J. D. (2007) Birmingham Then and Now. Then and Now Series. Mount Pleasant, South Carolina: Arcadia Press. ISBN 9780738543666