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Urban Assembly School for the Performing Arts Ceeb Code

Magnet high school in the U.s.

Fundamental Visual and Performing Arts Loftier School
Location

3125 S. Kingshighway
St. Louis, Missouri

United States

Information
Blazon Magnet high school
Motto There Volition Always Be a Central High[one]
Established February 7, 1853; 169 years ago  (February 7, 1853)
School district St. Louis Public Schools
Superintendent Kelvin Adams
Main Kacy Seals
Kinesthesia 28.fifty (FTE)[ii]
Grades 9–12
Enrollment 400 (2017-xviii)[ii]
Student to teacher ratio xiv.04[2]
Campus blazon Urban
Color(due south) Gilt, white, black
(formerly red and black)
Mascot Eagle (formerly Owl)
Paper None (formerly the Monthly Bloom, The Nut, The Reflector, and The Loftier School News)[one]
Yearbook Famebook [three] (formerly The Red and Black)[4]
Website www.slps.org/CVPA

Central Visual and Performing Arts High School (formerly Central High School) is a magnet high school in St. Louis, Missouri, part of the St. Louis Public Schools.

Founded in 1853, Central Loftier School is the oldest public high school due west of the Mississippi River, although information technology has moved several times and merged with a magnet schoolhouse in 1984.[1] [v] [vi] Central VPA specializes in the arts, with students taking courses in three art majors, including visual fine art, musical fine art, and performing fine art, with focuses on ceramics, drawing and painting, photography, instrumental music, vocal music, dance, and theater.[7]

History [edit]

Establishment and early moves: 1853–1893 [edit]

The first purpose-congenital Central Loftier School building opened in 1855.

In late 1852, the Board of Education of the St. Louis Public Schools ordered the organization and opening of a high schoolhouse to serve the metropolis population.[eight] The Board located the schoolhouse within Benton School, a primary school then located on 6th Street between St. Charles and Locust streets, and on February 7, 1853, 70 students were admitted after an entrance examination.[8] Its first chief was Jeremiah D. Low.[viii] Shortly after its opening, the Board ordered construction on a dedicated building for the high school, then known simply as St. Louis High Schoolhouse.[nine]

Designed by William Rumbold, the new building was congenital in 1855 at a price of $50,000 at the corner of Olive and 15th streets.[9] The edifice had three total stories and a basement, nine classrooms, a 700-seat auditorium, and 16 smaller rooms used as libraries and wardrobes.[9] It initially was built with a capacity of slightly less than 500 students.[9] By 1859, form requirements for entrance had been adult, and two courses of report (general or classical) were available to students.[9]

The high schoolhouse remained the only public loftier school in the customs until the establishment of Sumner High School for black students in 1874. Past the early on 1890s, the Central High School edifice at 15th and Olive had deteriorated and become too small for the number of students attempting to enroll.

New building and the tornado: 1893–1927 [edit]

The second Central Loftier Schoolhouse

Demolition, afterwards 1927 tornado damage.

The new Central High School building opened on September 1, 1893; designed by Furlong and Brown in the Victorian style, the facility cost $365,000, while state acquisition costs were $34,000. The building featured 4 stories, a curved facade, and a tower housing the school stairwells, and it had a capacity of 1,200 students.[10] A notable event in Central'due south history occurred when, in 1922, William J. Southward. Bryan retired after having taught for 50 years in the school.[11] During this menstruum, several other high schools opened in St. Louis to alleviate overcrowding at Central, including McKinley High School and Yeatman High Schoolhouse in 1904, followed by Soldan High School in 1909, Cleveland High School in 1915, Roosevelt Loftier School in 1925 and Beaumont High School in 1926.[12]

On September 27, 1927, a tornado struck St. Louis, including Primal Loftier School, killing 76 people and leaving i,500 others injured in full.[xiii] The tornado killed 5 students—they are listed in the 1928 Fundamental yearbook on a page with a touching poem--- and more a dozen were injured when the schoolhouse'due south tower collapsed.[14] The harm to the building was so great that the school was permanently relocated to nearby Yeatman High Schoolhouse, which was renamed Central High Schoolhouse.[10] The edifice, located on Garrison Avenue, had been designed by William B. Ittner as a three-story all-brick building with two towers at its entrance, and it would keep to house Central students through 2004.[ten] It has long been forgotten that the Cardinal pupil body and kinesthesia had just returned to the One thousand Avenue building FROM Yeatman High School, where the school had been housed 2 years while the One thousand Avenue building underwent an extensive renovation and updating. Schoolhouse had just gotten underway back at the Primal building when the tornado struck. Everyone and everything had to be moved back to Yeatman. It'south as well been long forgotten that 1 wall of the school somewhen built on the Fundamental site, the factory-like and uniquely conceived Hadley Vocational High School, was a wall preserved from the Fundamental building.

Integration, magnet school condition, and merger: 1927–1984 [edit]

Us historic identify

Cardinal Loftier School

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

Central High School, St. Louis, Missouri.jpg

Central Visual and Performing Arts High School is located in Missouri

Central Visual and Performing Arts High School

Location 3616 Garrison,
St. Louis, Missouri
Coordinates 38°39′35″N 90°12′55″Westward  /  38.659648°Due north 90.215241°W  / 38.659648; -ninety.215241 Coordinates: 38°39′35″Northward 90°12′55″W  /  38.659648°Due north 90.215241°Westward  / 38.659648; -90.215241
Architect William B. Ittner
MPS St. Louis Public Schools of William B. Ittner MPS
NRHP referenceNo. 12000873
Added to NRHP October 17, 2012

Key High School occupied the Yeatman High School building from 1927 to 2004.

Fundamental students continued their traditions at their new building on Garrison Avenue, including the use of the letter "H" to signify the school's status as the beginning high school w of the Mississippi.[1] During the 1930s, enrollment in the St. Louis Public Schools increased and achieved a summit of 106,300 students; several high schools in the district reported overcrowding, and Central was no exception.[15] In the 1931–1932 school yr, enrollment at Primal stood at slightly more than 1,500 students.[16] 2 years later, during the 1934–1935 school year, the enrollment at Central had grown to nearly 1,700 students.[17] It was during the early 1950s at Fundamental that the school's baseball team won iii consecutive state championships, led by Vern Bradburn as head autobus.[1]

In January 1955, Central began accepting blackness students for the first time nether a program adopted the previous year past the Board of Education in response to the Brown five. Board of Educational activity determination.[18] Despite the Board of Education's claim that integration was achieved smoothly commune-wide, in December 1957 more than 50 white students stayed out of schoolhouse in protest due to a dispute between a white and black student, leading to the dispatch of a dozen law officers to disperse the crowd.[19] According to the principal of Central, the 2 students had argued over ownership of a sweater, and the white pupil was assaulted.[nineteen] Despite the protestation outside, about of the schoolhouse's i,300 students remained in class; two students who refused police orders to disperse were arrested only later released.[nineteen]

Despite de jure integration, the St. Louis Public Schools kept no official records on the race of students from 1954 to 1963 in an attempt to maintain a "color bullheaded" policy.[20] Every bit part of this policy, the district took steps to ensure that black students remained in black schools or in self-contained classrooms and playgrounds at white schools, and throughout the 1960s, Central had a predominantly white population.[six] [20] Equally white families moved out of Primal's zone during the early 1970s, violence broke out between remaining white students and increasing numbers of black students.[6] In March 1979, Jesse Jackson visited the school to amend tensions, and by 1980, the schoolhouse's population was 95 percent black.[ane] [6]

During the 1970s, the St. Louis Public Schools implemented magnet schools; as part of this procedure, in 1976 the district opened Visual and Performing Arts High School (VPA) equally a small learning community magnet school within the O'Fallon Technical High Schoolhouse building on McRee Avenue.[21] VPA moved to the Humboldt School edifice on ninth Street during the tardily 1970s, and in 1984, VPA moved again when information technology merged with Central High Schoolhouse; the combined school, Central VPA, continued to operate at Central's Garrison Avenue location.[21]

Recent history and moves: 1984–present [edit]

In early 1988, plans were announced to close the Central VPA building on Garrison Avenue for renovations and transfer its students to McKinley High Schoolhouse for one yr.[22] Most 800 Cardinal VPA students joined approximately 120 McKinley mass media magnet school students at the McKinley edifice, while 330 non-magnet students at McKinley were transferred to other comprehensive schools in the district.[22] [23] The renovations at Central VPA, planned to price $vi million, were office of a $114 one thousand thousand district capital comeback plan.[22] Renovations to the Garrison Artery building eventually exceeded $7.5 million, although they were completed in time for the 1989–1990 school yr.[24] [25]

Among the improvements to the school was a full renovation of the theater, which included removal of the structurally unsafe balcony, installation of acoustical panels, and construction of a light and sound booth in the rear of the auditorium.[25] In addition, the renovations included a new entrance hall for the theater, a new burn alarm and sprinkler organisation, new aluminum windows, a new fine art studio on the building roof, a library expansion, and updates to science laboratories.[25] After the renovations were completed, Fundamental VPA students returned for the 1989–1990 school year.[26]

Upon the reopening of the Garrison Avenue building, the Anheuser-Busch visitor donated an aluminum statue of William Shakespeare to the schoolhouse.[25] The schoolhouse also won praise as an case of the success of the magnet school programme by the U.S. Commune Court judge overseeing the desegregation case that created magnet schools in St. Louis:

For illustration, Central Loftier School has been physically refurbished and is now meeting its needs as a performing arts high school. The leadership there is excellent; racial quotas have been met; enrollment is full.

Locations of Central High School
Year(s) Address Neighborhood
1853–1855 400 N. sixth Street Downtown
1855–1893 300 N. 15th St. Downtown Westward
1893–1927 1020 N. M Ave. JeffVanderLou
1927–1988 3616 Garrison Ave. JeffVanderLou
1988–1989 2156 Russell Blvd. McKinley Heights
1989–2004 3616 Garrison Ave. JeffVanderLou
2004–present 3125 South. Kingshighway Southwest Garden

Despite the renovations of 1988–1989, within a decade the school edifice again was in need of meaning repairs.[28] During the belatedly 1990s, several ceilings in the building had collapsed due to roof leaks, while the building suffered from a rodent and insect infestation.[28] By 2002, the building'south roof leaked into the music wing and windows were stuck open in the auditorium leading to interior problems.[28] Supplies and coin for extra rehearsals besides were in brusque supply, and teachers complained that both the cafeteria and the theater seated only one-half of the 500 students at the school.[28] The principal of the school, John Niemeyer, noted that budget cuts and paperwork bug were to blame for many problems and argued that the edifice was not suited for a performing arts school.[28]

As a result of deteriorating weather condition at Central VPA, the St. Louis Board of Education heard several proposals on moving Central VPA to some other building.[29] Amid the options considered at a coming together in November 2002 was to renovate the Kiel Opera House equally an academic facility and performing arts venue; although the proposal to move to Kiel was not adopted, the Board committed to replacing the high schoolhouse's edifice in the most term.[29] In the summer of 2004, the Board announced that Central VPA would motion into the former Southwest High School building at the corner of Kingshighway and Arsenal.[21] As of January 2012[update], the Garrison Avenue building, home to Yeatman High Schoolhouse from 1904 to 1927 and to Central from 1927 to 2004, is for sale for $250,000.[30]

In December 2008 as part of a promotional tour, actor Will Smith visited students at Key VPA and viewed them conducting a dance routine to ane of his songs.[31] Every bit of the 2010–2011 school twelvemonth, Central VPA began no longer offering programs in television receiver or radio. In addition, Fundamental discontinued its sports program in order to employ the coin to help fund the remaining arts programs.[ citation needed ]

On October 17, 2012, the Garrison Artery edifice was added to the National Register of Celebrated Places.[32]

Current status [edit]

Equally of the 2015–2016 school year, Central VPA operates on a 7:20 am to 2:27 pm schedule.[33]

Activities [edit]

For the 2011–2012 schoolhouse year, the school offered only two activities approved by the Missouri State High Schoolhouse Activities Association (MSHSAA): band, orchestra and vocal music, and speech communication and debate; the school does not sponsor able-bodied teams.[34] In addition to its current activities, its students have won three state championships:

  • Baseball game: 1950, 1951, 1952

The school too has produced four singles lawn tennis state champions and three individual wrestling champions.[35]

Demographics [edit]

Enrollment, racial demographics, and gratuitous or reduced cost lunches[36]
Twelvemonth Enrollment Black (%) White (%) Hispanic (%) Asian (%) Free/reduced tiffin (%)
2011 552 72.four 21.8 3.iii 2.five 83.5
2010 694 73.five 21.3 three.two 1.9 eighty.9
2009 781 71.7 24.2 2.0 1.eight 63.ii
2008 688 69.two 25.9 2.9 1.ix 58.0
2007 623 69.3 27.1 ii.6 0.6 69.3
2006 584 65.2 31.5 two.2 0.seven 66.7
2005 541 65.1 32.5 ane.8 0.4 61.6
2004 507 65.i 33.7 1.0 0.2 64.vi
2003 493 65.9 33.3 0.vi 0.2 63.viii
2002 616 64.4 34.1 i.0 0.5 65.five

Academic and subject field problems [edit]

Central VPA has a higher graduation rate of 87.7 for 2010–2011, higher than the state average of 79.8.[36] [37] Central VPA besides has a field of study incident charge per unit of iii.3 pct.[36] [38] Since the passage of No Child Left Backside in 2001, Central VPA met the requirements for acceptable yearly progress (AYP) in communication arts in 2006 and 2011; information technology met AYP in mathematics in 2011.[36] In addition, more than 80 pct of Central VPA graduates enrolled in a public university in Missouri required remedial coursework in either English or mathematics.[39]

Graduation and dropout rates by year
Twelvemonth Graduates Accomplice dropouts‡ Graduation rate† Total dropouts‡ Dropout rate†
2011 164 23 87.7 34 6.8
2010 149 37 fourscore.1 33 5.i
2009 122 46 72.six 32 four.iii
2008 107 42 71.viii 39 5.7
2007 110 29 79.one 24 3.vii
2006 86 xix 81.9 85 xv.8
2005 118 13 90.1 34 half-dozen.3
2004 93 9 91.2 14 two.eight
2003 97 25 79.5 v ane.0
2002 114 xl 74.2 20 3.iv
‡ Cohort dropouts is the number of students from the course level graduating for that year who dropped out.
† Graduation rate is calculated equally number of graduates divided by number of graduates plus dropouts, multiplied by 100.
‡ Full dropouts is the number of students at the school who dropped out of school during that school twelvemonth.
† Dropout charge per unit is calculated equally number of total dropouts/(September enrollment plus transfers in and minus transfers out + September enrollment)/2).
Incident rates past year
Twelvemonth Enrollment Incidents‡ Incident rate†
2011 522 17 three.3
2010 694 sixteen two.3
2009 782 71 nine.1
2008 688 38 5.five
2007 623 0 0.0
2006 584 20 3.4
2005 541 14 2.half dozen
2004 507 viii 1.6
2003 493 ii 0.4
2002 616 4 0.six
‡ Full incidents is the number of incidents in which as a upshot a pupil was removed for ten or more than consecutive days from a traditional classroom.
† Incident rate is calculated as enrollment divided by total incidents.

Notable people [edit]

Faculty [edit]

  • Helen Almira Shafer: Subsequently president of Wellesley College[forty]

Alumni [edit]

  • Ray Armstead: Olympic aureate medalist runner[41]
  • Hettie Barnhill: Dancer and choreographer[42]
  • Frank Baumann: Major League Baseball player[43]
  • Freeman Bosley, Jr.: 43rd Mayor of St. Louis[10] [44]
  • Al Caldwell: R&B musician and producer[41]
  • Richard Fortus: Guitarist with Guns N' Roses[41]
  • Nathan Frank: Fellow member of the United states Business firm of Representatives[10]
  • Walker Hancock: Sculptor and winner of the Medal of Freedom and National Medal of Arts[45]
  • Fannie Hurst: Writer[10]
  • Fred Koenig: Major League Baseball player, manager, autobus[46]
  • Frederick Kreismann: 31st Mayor of St. Louis[47]
  • Breckinridge Long: U.S. Ambassador to Italian republic[48]
  • Agnes Moorehead: Moving-picture show extra, winner of the Golden Globe Award and Emmy Accolade[1]
  • Ben Moreell: U.S. Navy admiral, founder of the Seabees[41]
  • Sam Muchnick: Professional wrestling promoter[41]
  • Charles Nagel: Founder of the United States Bedchamber of Commerce and Secretarial assistant of Commerce and Labor[ten]
  • David Merrick: Tony Honor-winning Broadway producer[x] [49]
  • Edgar Monsanto Queeny: Industrialist and chairman of Monsanto[ten]
  • Siegfried Reinhardt: Painter and stained drinking glass creative person[10]
  • Larry Whisenton: Major League Baseball game player
  • Ryan Koenig: Musician, recording creative person, songwriter, and producer

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d east f g Dillon, Dan (2005). Then, Where'd Yous Become to Loftier Schoolhouse: The Baby Boomer Years. Vol. two. St. Louis, Missouri: Virginia Publishing. pp. 24–26. ISBN1-891442-33-3.
  2. ^ a b c "CENTRAL VISUAL/PERF. ARTS HIGH". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
  3. ^ "Famebook". Key VPA High School. St. Louis Public Schools. Archived from the original on February 22, 2013. Retrieved Jan 13, 2012.
  4. ^ "Help Yourself". St. Louis Mail service-Dispatch. October 16, 1990. Dollars and Sense, 6D.
  5. ^ Philip Dine (September 18, 1992). "St. Louis Ties Ship Mantia To Washington". St. Louis Post-Acceleration. Business organization 10D. Bernard'south and Mantia's wives went to the same loftier schoolhouse, the sometime Central High School on Natural Bridge — the oldest high school due west of the Mississippi River.
  6. ^ a b c d Jeannette Batz Cooperman (November xviii, 2004). "'At that place Will E'er Be a Central Loftier School'". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Leave 18. It's endured six moves and a name modify, merely St. Louis' commencement public institution of "college pedagogy" marks its 150th anniversary on Tuesday with a gala at UMSL.
  7. ^ "Educatee Handbook and Course Itemize" (PDF). Central VPA Loftier School. St. Louis Public Schools. Retrieved January 13, 2012. [ permanent dead link ]
  8. ^ a b c St. Louis Board of Education (1854). Annual Written report of the St. Louis Public Schools. Vol. i.
  9. ^ a b c d e St. Louis Board of Education (1859). Almanac Report of the St. Louis Public Schools. Vol. 5.
  10. ^ a b c d due east f g h i j Bosenbecker, Ray (2004). So, Where'd You Go to High School?. Vol. 1. St. Louis, Missouri: Virginia Publishing. pp. lxxx–82. ISBN978-ane-891442-thirty-viii.
  11. ^ C.O. Davis, ed. (1922). Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting. North Primal Clan of Colleges and Secondary Schools. p. 154.
  12. ^ Bosenbecker, Ray (2004). So, Where'd You Go to Loftier School?. Vol. 1. St. Louis, Missouri: Virginia Publishing. p. 163. ISBN978-1-891442-30-viii.
  13. ^ Mike Bauhof (October 2, 2007). "Living St. Louis Video — 1927 Tornado". Living St. Louis. KETC Public Television. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  14. ^ "St. Louis Tornado Dead Total 64, Injured 671". Associated Press. September 30, 1927. Archived from the original on March 12, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  15. ^ Bosenbecker, Ray (2004). So, Where'd You lot Go to High School?. Vol. 1. St. Louis, Missouri: Virginia Publishing. p. 32. ISBN978-ane-891442-xxx-viii.
  16. ^ Twenty-sixth Annual Report of the Missouri Library Commission. Jefferson City, Missouri: Midland Printing Company. 1933. p. 14.
  17. ^ Twenty-ninth Annual Report of the Missouri Library Commission. Jefferson City, Missouri: Midland Printing Visitor. 1936. p. 25.
  18. ^ The St. Louis Story: the Integration of a Public School System. St. Louis, Missouri: St. Louis Public Schools. 1955.
  19. ^ a b c "l Whites Stay Out of St. Louis School". New York Times. Associated Press. December 18, 1957.
  20. ^ a b Missouri Advisory Committee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights (January 1981). Schoolhouse Desegregation in the St. Louis and Kansas City Areas (PDF) (Report). U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. p. xvi. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-xi.
  21. ^ a b c "History". Key VPA High School. St. Louis Public Schools. Archived from the original on June 4, 2012. Retrieved Jan 13, 2012.
  22. ^ a b c Virginia Hick (May seven, 1988). "100 McKinley Students March against Transfer Program". St. Louis Postal service-Dispatch. News 3A.
  23. ^ Later on the renovations were completed, the mass media magnet program was folded into the Central VPA magnet plan, and McKinley became a magnet eye school. See Bosenbecker (2004), p. 101.
  24. ^ Tim Bryant (July 31, 1988). "Young Actor Had Pick of Scholarships". St. Louis Postal service-Dispatch. News 1D.
  25. ^ a b c d Virginia Hick (October 27, 1989). "The Bard, Recycled, Finds a Home". St. Louis Mail-Acceleration.
  26. ^ "Magnet Schools are Focus of Fair at Union Station". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. March 3, 1989. News 4F.
  27. ^ Stephen Northward. Limbaugh (September 15, 1991). "Land Won't Pay Desegregation Bills Forever". St. Louis Post-Acceleration. 3C Commentary.
  28. ^ a b c d e Carolyn Bower (September 24, 2002). "Hit a Low Note". St. Louis Postal service-Dispatch. Metro B1.
  29. ^ a b Carolyn Bower (November 6, 2002). "Shuttered Kiel Should Requite Ascent to Arts School, Board Hears". St. Louis Postal service-Dispatch. Metro B1.
  30. ^ Linda M. Walsh Existent Manor, For Sale: St. Louis Public Schools "Central High School" (PDF), St. Louis, Missouri: Hilliker Corporation, retrieved Jan 14, 2012
  31. ^ Joe Williams (December 14, 2008). "Volition Smith's Mission: Share the Happiness". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  32. ^ Weekly Listing Of Deportment Taken On Backdrop: 10/15/12 through ten/19/12, National Park Service
  33. ^ "Notable Alumni". Central VPA High School. St. Louis Public Schools. Archived from the original on 2012-01-07. Retrieved Jan 13, 2012.
  34. ^ MSHSAA: Central Visual and Performing Arts High Schoolhouse
  35. ^ MSHSAA: Championship Histories by Sport
  36. ^ a b c d Missouri DESE: Statistics
  37. ^ Missouri DESE: State and District Graduation Rates Archived Dec 24, 2012, at the Wayback Auto
  38. ^ The discipline incident rate is calculated by the number of incidents resulting in a removal from schoolhouse for 10 or more than days divided by the number of students in the school.
  39. ^ Missouri DESE: Remedial coursework
  40. ^ "Miss Helen A. Shafer Dying". New York Times. January 20, 1894.
  41. ^ a b c d e "Notable Alumni". Central VPA Loftier School. St. Louis Public Schools. Archived from the original on February 22, 2013. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  42. ^ Kevin C. Johnson (January 24, 2010). "Dancer Takes Big Pace from Muny to Broadway: Visual and Performing Arts Grad Discovered Herself through Dance". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A&E D2.
  43. ^ "Bonus Baby Hurls for the Colonels". Bridgeport Dominicus Herald. United Press International. June 22, 1952.
  44. ^ "Freeman Bosley, Jr". Mayors of St. Louis. St. Louis Public Library. Archived from the original on January half-dozen, 2009. Retrieved January xiii, 2012.
  45. ^ Walter Barlow Stevens (1921). Centennial History of Missouri. St. Louis, Missouri: S.J. Clarke Publishing Company. p. 76.
  46. ^ "Fred Koenig, 61; Was Player, Managing director, Coach with Cardinals". St. Louis Mail-Acceleration. January 14, 1993. News 4C.
  47. ^ "Frederick Kreismann". Mayors of St. Louis. St. Louis Public Library. Archived from the original on December 18, 2007. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  48. ^ Consolidated Publishing Visitor (1921). Who's Who in the Nation's Capital. Washington, D.C.: Consolidating Publishing Co. p. 242.
  49. ^ Brennan, Charlie (2006). Here'south Where: a Guide to Illustrious St. Louis. St. Louis, Missouri: Missouri Historical Lodge Press. p. 94. ISBN978-one-883982-57-7.

External links [edit]

  • Fractional alumni listings for Fundamental Loftier School
  • Photographs of Central High School building on Garrison Avenue

goodhilewhousels.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Visual_and_Performing_Arts_High_School

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