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  2. Gaines High School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaines_High_School

    9–12. Gaines High School was a high school for African Americans and also later served as a normal school training teachers in Cincinnati, Ohio. [1] It opened in 1866 and was named for school board member John I. Gaines, an advocate of schools for African Americans in Ohio. It was one of Ohio's first public high schools for African Americans.

  3. Frankfurt American High School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frankfurt_American_High_School

    The new school opened with 185 students and had 24 graduates in the class of 1947. During the '46–'47 school year, 7th and 8th graders attended the school. Frankfurt, along with Berlin, Bremen (Bremerhaven), Heidelberg , Munich and Erlangen ( Nürnberg ), were the first American high schools to open in the European Theater between September ...

  4. Cincinnati Public Schools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cincinnati_Public_Schools

    Cincinnati Public Schools is the largest Ohio school district rated as 'effective'. Founded in 1829 as the Common Schools of Cincinnati, it is governed by the Cincinnati Board of Education. In addition to Cincinnati, the district includes Amberley, Golf Manor, Ridgewood, most of Silverton, and a portion of Fairfax.

  5. Gainesville High School (Florida) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gainesville_High_School...

    Gainesville High School (Florida) Go 'Canes! Gainesville High School ( GHS) is a high school in Gainesville, Florida, United States. There were 1,890 students attending it in 2015. The current principal is Daniel Ferguson, who joined the GHS staff in July 2022.

  6. William Parham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Parham

    When the "colored School Board" was abolished he was made principal of all the schools, and then served as principal of Gaines High School from 1887. [1] He resigned from his position as principal in 1890 and changed careers from education to law, becoming the first African American to graduate from Cincinnati Law School . [1]

  7. Peter H. Clark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_H._Clark

    Peter Humphries Clark (March 29, 1829 – June 21, 1925) was an American abolitionist and speaker. One of Ohio's most effective black abolitionist writers and speakers, he became the first teacher engaged by the Cincinnati black public schools in 1849, and the founder and principal of Ohio's first public high school for black students in 1866.

  8. Clay County School District (Georgia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clay_County_School...

    Telephone. (229) 768-2232. Fax. (229) 768-3654. Website. www .clay .k12 .ga .us. The Clay County School District is a public school district in Clay County, Georgia, United States, based in Fort Gaines. It serves the communities of Bluffton and Fort Gaines.

  9. Fort Gaines, Georgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Gaines,_Georgia

    Fort Gaines is located along the western edge of Clay County at (31.614226, -85.048317 Its western boundary is the Chattahoochee River , which is also the state line with Alabama . Walter F. George Lock and Dam crosses the river between the northern side of Fort Gaines and Alabama, forming Walter F. George Lake , also known as Lake Eufaula.