Cities
Memphis City Schools
Memphis? public school system has improved by leaps and bounds over the last two hundred years. When it started, people?s homes doubled up as schools. Today, the Memphis School system is the 21st largest school system in the country and the second biggest employer in the city. The over 190 schools function on a budget of over $770 million, with 119,000 students and 16,000 employees.
The city?s school system was chartered in 1826. From then until 1848, Memphis schools were privately owned by affluent citizens. The first official Memphis school was taught by a certain Underwood from Alabama. Other schools soon followed suit, taught by clergymen and businessmen in their homes and churches. Eugene McGivney was perhaps the city?s most famous educator. He started a school in the city in 1833 with the experience he brought from Pennsylvania and Ireland.
Education was rare among the lower- and middle-class white children, and black children had virtually no chance at learning. In 1848, the first free school, named ?Third and Overton? changed this.
J. W. A. Pettit is called the father of the free school system of Memphis. Through Pettit?s authority, Memphis started giving treasury funds to the fledging schools. Pettit, who was the first superintendent, was not paid. It was in 1852 ? the number of schools totaled 13 then ? that a city school tax rate was imposed. A county school tax rate followed two years later. There were four educational wards in the city, with each having a teacher and a rented schoolroom.
Memphis soon began to offer help to schools for black students. Clay Street School was the first recorded public school for black children. It was founded in1873 and officially closed in 1950.
The Memphis City School system?s oldest running school is Cummings Elementary, which started in 1902 for white students. Klondike Elementary School is the oldest school still in use that was meant primarily for black students. It was erected in the same year as the Cummings Elementary school.
Some of the more famous Memphis High schools are Messick (founded in 1908); Central (1911); Treadwell (1915); South Side (1922); Humes (1925); Booker T. Washington (1926); Technical (1928); Manassas (1927); and Hamilton (1942).
Memphis provides detailed information on Memphis, Memphis Real Estate, Memphis TN, Memphis City Schools and more. Memphis is affiliated with Downtown Memphis Hotels. |
Jennifer Bailey
Similar articles
Dodge City Kansas
Dodge City Kansas is a famous old western town. Dodge City is located in Ford County, KS. The down town area is totally revitalized. There are a couple of large industries there and a huge Stock Yard, and Auction. Read more →Hello from New York City (4) - Staten Island and a Random Act of Violence
The Staten Island Ferry is a fabulous institution. It is a huge ferry that departs from a very modern, glass enclosed terminal, holds several thousand people and in just about 20 minutes whisks you over to Staten Island, very close to the Statue of Liberty, and all this for free! Read more →Odessa - The Most Specific City Of Ukraine
What is it that makes Odessa so specific a city?Some say the answer lies in the place's celebrated cosmopolitan mix of nationalities, which has historically seen large Jewish, Greek, Russian, Moldovan and Ukrainian populations mixing freely with any number of sailors and visitors from around the world. Read more →Short City Breaks to Amsterdam!
With your next weekend break you must plan a holiday package to the Cultural Capital of Holland, Amsterdam. With its beautiful canals running through the city centre, Amsterdam earned itself the honorary name of "the Venice of the Netherlands". Read more →Aphorism
Traveling, you realize that differences are lost: each city takes to resembling all cities, places exchange their form, order, distances, a shapeless dust cloud invades the continents.
