Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Booker T. Washington High School. 1,246 likes · 7 talking about this. #BulldogBuilt This iconic institution, named after the famous educator Booker T. Washington, was built on Faith, Hope, and Love...

  2. Booker T. Washington High School is a public high school in Atlanta, Georgia, serving grades 9-12 with a predominantly African American student population. The school faces significant challenges, consistently performing below state and district averages on academic measures and ranking among the lowest-performing high schools in Georgia.

  3. Additions: 1938, 1948, 1952, 1954, 1965, 1968. Renovation: 1988. Architect: Eugene C. Wachendorff. Booker T. Washington High School was the first black public secondary school in Atlanta. It is reflective of a period of economic growth and transition in the black community. It was in the early 1920s that new communities developed and built by ...

  4. One of the first major public high schools in the country for African-Americans when it was built in 1924, the alumni roster of Booker T. Washington High School reads like a page from Who's Who in Black America: Entertainer Nipsey Russell, performer Lena Horne, opera singer Mattiwilda Dobbs, former Georgia State Senator Leroy Johnson, former U.S. Health and Human Services Director Louis ...

  5. Booker T. Washington High School refers to several schools in the United States named after the African-American education pioneer Booker T. Washington : Booker T. Washington Magnet High School (Montgomery, Alabama)

  6. Additions: 1938, 1948, 1952, 1954, 1965, 1968. Renovation: 1988. Architect: Eugene C. Wachendorff. Booker T. Washington High School was the first black public secondary school in Atlanta. It is reflective of a period of economic growth and transition in the black community. It was in the early 1920s that new communities developed and built by ...

  7. Booker T. Washington High School is a public high school in Atlanta, Georgia. Named for the famous educator Booker T. Washington, [3] the school opened in September 1924 under the auspices of the Atlanta Board of Education, with the late Charles Lincoln Harper as principal. It was the first public high school for African-Americans in the state of Georgia and the Atlanta Public Schools system. [4]