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Central High School (Philadelphia)

Central High School is a public high school in the Logan[3] section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1836, it is the second-oldest continuously used public high school in the United States. It is a four-year university preparatory magnet school.

Central High School
Address
1700 West Olney Avenue

,
19141

Information
TypePublic high school
Established1836; 187 years ago (1836)
School districtSchool District of Philadelphia
PresidentKatharine Davis
Teaching staff90.81 (FTE)[1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment2,371 (2017–18)[1]
Student to teacher ratio26.11[1]
Color(s)  
Athletics conferencePhiladelphia Public League
NicknameLancers
NewspaperThe Centralizer
Television networkCentral Broadcast News (CBN)
Websitecentralhigh.net
Central High School[2]
Location1700 West Olney Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Coordinates40°2′15″N 75°9′00″W / 40.03750°N 75.15000°W / 40.03750; -75.15000
Area5 acres (2.0 ha)
Built1937
ArchitectCatharine, Irwin T.
Architectural styleModerne
MPSPhiladelphia Public Schools TR
NRHP reference No.86003267
Added to NRHPDecember 4, 1986

About 2,400 students attend grades 9 through 12. Central High School is the only high school in the United States with authority, granted by an Act of Assembly in 1849, to confer academic degrees upon its graduates.[4] This authority to grant academic degrees led Central to refer to the principal of the school as the “President” of Central High School. The current and fifteenth president of Central High School is Katharine S. Davis.[5]

Central, rather than using a general class year to identify its classes (as in "class of 2023"), uses the class graduating number system (as in "280th" graduating class" or "280"). This tradition started shortly after the school's founding when it was common to have two graduating classes per year – one in January and one in June. In June 1965, semiannual graduations were replaced by annual graduations. As of the 2022–2023 school year, the current senior class is 282.[6]

History edit

19th century edit

 
An 1839 daguerreotype of Central High School by Joseph Saxton
 
Central High School's first location on Juniper Street near Market Street
 
Central High School's second location at the southeast corner of Broad and Green Streets
 
A postcard of the Boys Central High School's location at the southwest corner of Broad and Green Streets

Central High School of Philadelphia was founded in 1836 as "the crowning glory" of Philadelphia's public school system, "the worthy apex to a noble pyramid", and the first "high" school in the state. Because city voters only reluctantly had been convinced of the need for a high school, the curriculum was carefully and publicly geared to the needs of taxpayers. Central's founders made an especially concerted effort to avoid educating students in the manner of private academies of the day, where classical languages and literature were of paramount importance.[7]

Central High School is the second oldest continuously public high school in the United States. The school was chartered by an Act of Assembly and approved on June 13, 1836. A site was purchased on the east side of Juniper Street below Market Street, and the cornerstone was laid on September 19, 1837. The school opened on October 21, 1838, with four professors and sixty-three students.[8]

In November 1839, Alexander Dallas Bache, great-grandson of Benjamin Franklin, and Professor of Natural Philosophy and Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania, was elected the first President of Central High School.[9] President Bache resigned in 1842 to return to his professorship at the University of Pennsylvania, and was succeeded by John Seely Hart, who had been a professor of languages at Princeton University.[8]

An Act of Assembly approved on April 9, 1849, provided that:

"The Controllers of the Public Schools of the First School District of Pennsylvania shall have and possess power to confer academic degrees in the arts upon graduates of the Central High School, in the City of Philadelphia, and the same and like power to confer degrees, honorary and otherwise, which is now possessed by the University of Pennsylvania."[10] In accordance with this Act, the Board of Controllers on September 11, 1849, authorized the conferring of appropriate degrees upon graduates of Central High.[8]

In September 1854, the school transferred to a new building, located at the southeast corner of Broad and Green Streets. In 1858, President Hart resigned and was succeeded by Nicholas Harper Maguire.[8]

In October of 1891 a Graduate Course in Pedagogy, later called the Philadelphia School of Pedagogy, was added to Central as a teacher training program for men.[6] The School of Pedagogy was disbanded in 1918 due to numbers of enrollees dwindling as a result of World War I.[11]

20th century edit

In September 1900, the school moved to its third location in a newer and larger building located at Broad, Green, Fifteenth, and Brandywine Streets.[8] During the formal dedication on November 22, 1902, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, addressed the students.[12]

After 139 years of existence as an all-male public high school, Central's all-male policy was challenged by Susan Vorchheimer, who wished to be admitted to Central. On August 7, 1975, U.S. District Court Judge Clarence C. Newcomer ruled that Central must admit academically qualified girls starting in the fall term of 1975. The decision was appealed, and the Third Circuit Court ruled that Central had the right to retain its present status.[13] The case eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court that, on April 19, 1977, upheld the Third Circuit Court's verdict by a 4 to 4 vote with one abstention. That Supreme Court case was called Vorchheimer v. School Dist. of Philadelphia.[14][15]

In August 1983, Judge William M. Marutani of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, ruled that the single-sex admission policy was unconstitutional. The Board of Education voted not to appeal the legal decision, thereby admitting girls to Central High School. In September 1983, the first six girls, all seniors, were admitted.[16]

In October 1987, and again in September 2011,[17] Central High School was officially named a Secondary school of National Excellence by the United States Department of Education and named a Blue Ribbon School. In March 1992, Redbook magazine named Central one of the best schools in Pennsylvania. Central was named "Best Secondary School in Pennsylvania" by the magazine each year since they began rating the nation's best schools.[citation needed]

Presidents of Central High School edit

  • Alexander Dallas Bache – 1839–1842
  • John Seely Hart – 1842–1858
  • Nicholas Harper Maguire. – 1858–1866
  • George Inman Riché – 1866–1886 (19th Class)
  • Franklin Taylor – 1886–1888
  • Henry Clark Johnson – 1888–1893
  • Robert Ellis Thompson – 1894–1920
  • John Louis Haney – 1920–1943 (100th Class)
  • William Hafner Cornog – 1943–1955 (146th Class)
  • Elmer Field – 1955–1962 (122nd Class)
  • William H. Gregory – 1962–1969
  • Howard Carlisle – 1969–1983 (162nd Class)
  • Sheldon S. Pavel – 1984–2012
  • Timothy J. McKenna – 2012–2022
  • Katharine S. Davis – 2022–present (264th Class)

Guide to class numbers edit

Since graduates are usually identified by class number, the year they graduated is not immediately apparent. This section explains the relation between class number and graduation date.

The first class graduated in June 1842. Through much of the school's history, there were two graduating classes per year, in January and June. However, there was only one graduating class in June in some years, including all years after 1965. The following list details the correspondence between class number and graduation date.[18]

 1 June 1842 2 June 1843 3 January 1844 4 June 1844 … 2 classes per year … 75 January 1880 76 June 1880 77 June 1881 78 June 1882 79 January 1883 … 2 classes per year … 95 January 1891 96 June 1891 97 June 1892 … 1 class per year … 116 June 1911 117 January 1912 118 June 1912 … 2 classes per year … 223 January 1965 224 June 1965 225 June 1966 … 1 class per year … 

Thus, for classes graduating after 1965, if one knows the class number, one can determine the year of graduation by adding 1741. Conversely, if one knows the graduation year, one can determine the class number by subtracting 1741.

Notable alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Central HS". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  3. ^ "Logan Redevelopment Area Plan 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine." Philadelphia City Planning Commission. May 2002. 1 (document page 3). Retrieved on August 2, 2011. "The neighborhood is generally defined as including the area from Wingohocking Street north to Olney Avenue and from Broad Street east to the railroad right-of-way east of Marshall Street. Logan extends west to 16th Street north of Lindley Avenue, where Wakefield Park forms the boundary."
  4. ^ Nitzsche, George Erazmus (1918). University of Pennsylvania: Its History, Traditions, Buildings and Memorials ; Also a Brief Guide to Philadelphia (Seventh ed.). Philadelphia: International Printing Company. p. 290. Retrieved 3 June 2015. Pennsylvania Act of Assembly April 9, 1849.
  5. ^ "About Central – Central High School". Retrieved 2023-09-30.
  6. ^ a b Edmonds, Franklin Spencer (1902). History of the Central High School of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: Lippincott.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-09-29.
  8. ^ a b c d e The Public Schools of Philadelphia: Historical, Biographical, Statistical by John Trevor Custis, Burk & McFetridge Co. Publisher, 1897, Pg. 131 &c.
  9. ^ "Alexander Dallas Bache (1806–1867)". upenn.edu. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  10. ^ Pepper, George Wharton; Lewis, William Draper, eds. (1896). A Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania: From the Year One Thousand Seven Hundred to the Sixth Day of July, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Eighty-three. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: T. & J. W. Johnson & Co. pp. 845–.
  11. ^ "All Girl Class; No Men". No. page 2. Philadelphia Inquirer. 3 Dec 1918.
  12. ^ Skinner, Charles R. (1902-11-25), "Letter from Charles R. Skinner to Theodore Roosevelt", Theodore Roosevelt Papers, Library of Congress Manuscript Division, p. 161
  13. ^ Vorchheimer v. School District of Philadelphia, 532 F.2d 880 (Third Circuit Court 1976).
  14. ^ Vorchheimer v. School District of Philadelphia, 430 U.S. 703, 97 S.Ct. 1671, 51 L.Ed.2d 750 (Supreme Court of the United States 1977).
  15. ^ "Vorchheimer v. School Dist. of Philadelphia". Oyez.
  16. ^ Robbins, William (3 September 1983). "Judge Orders Elite Old Philadelphia High School to Admit Girls". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
  17. ^ "Central High, 6 elementaries bring federal honors to Pa". philly-archives. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  18. ^ Alumni Directory 1995, Associated Alumni of the Central High School of Philadelphia, Bernard C. Harris Publishing, 1995.

External links edit

  • Current Central High School Web site
  • Historical Central High School Web sites (from the Wayback Machine):
    • thru March 21, 2011
    • thru August 13, 2010
    • thru February 6, 2001
    • thru April 20, 1999
  • The School District of Philadelphia

central, high, school, philadelphia, central, high, school, public, high, school, logan, section, philadelphia, pennsylvania, founded, 1836, second, oldest, continuously, used, public, high, school, united, states, four, year, university, preparatory, magnet, . Central High School is a public high school in the Logan 3 section of Philadelphia Pennsylvania Founded in 1836 it is the second oldest continuously used public high school in the United States It is a four year university preparatory magnet school Central High SchoolAddress1700 West Olney AvenuePhiladelphia Pennsylvania 19141United StatesInformationTypePublic high schoolEstablished1836 187 years ago 1836 School districtSchool District of PhiladelphiaPresidentKatharine DavisTeaching staff90 81 FTE 1 Grades9 12Enrollment2 371 2017 18 1 Student to teacher ratio26 11 1 Color s Athletics conferencePhiladelphia Public LeagueNicknameLancersNewspaperThe CentralizerTelevision networkCentral Broadcast News CBN Websitecentralhigh wbr netCentral High School 2 U S National Register of Historic PlacesShow map of PhiladelphiaShow map of PennsylvaniaShow map of the United StatesLocation1700 West Olney Avenue Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Coordinates40 2 15 N 75 9 00 W 40 03750 N 75 15000 W 40 03750 75 15000Area5 acres 2 0 ha Built1937ArchitectCatharine Irwin T Architectural styleModerneMPSPhiladelphia Public Schools TRNRHP reference No 86003267Added to NRHPDecember 4 1986About 2 400 students attend grades 9 through 12 Central High School is the only high school in the United States with authority granted by an Act of Assembly in 1849 to confer academic degrees upon its graduates 4 This authority to grant academic degrees led Central to refer to the principal of the school as the President of Central High School The current and fifteenth president of Central High School is Katharine S Davis 5 Central rather than using a general class year to identify its classes as in class of 2023 uses the class graduating number system as in 280th graduating class or 280 This tradition started shortly after the school s founding when it was common to have two graduating classes per year one in January and one in June In June 1965 semiannual graduations were replaced by annual graduations As of the 2022 2023 school year the current senior class is 282 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 2 20th century 2 Presidents of Central High School 3 Guide to class numbers 4 Notable alumni 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit19th century edit nbsp An 1839 daguerreotype of Central High School by Joseph Saxton nbsp Central High School s first location on Juniper Street near Market Street nbsp Central High School s second location at the southeast corner of Broad and Green Streets nbsp A postcard of the Boys Central High School s location at the southwest corner of Broad and Green StreetsCentral High School of Philadelphia was founded in 1836 as the crowning glory of Philadelphia s public school system the worthy apex to a noble pyramid and the first high school in the state Because city voters only reluctantly had been convinced of the need for a high school the curriculum was carefully and publicly geared to the needs of taxpayers Central s founders made an especially concerted effort to avoid educating students in the manner of private academies of the day where classical languages and literature were of paramount importance 7 Central High School is the second oldest continuously public high school in the United States The school was chartered by an Act of Assembly and approved on June 13 1836 A site was purchased on the east side of Juniper Street below Market Street and the cornerstone was laid on September 19 1837 The school opened on October 21 1838 with four professors and sixty three students 8 In November 1839 Alexander Dallas Bache great grandson of Benjamin Franklin and Professor of Natural Philosophy and Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania was elected the first President of Central High School 9 President Bache resigned in 1842 to return to his professorship at the University of Pennsylvania and was succeeded by John Seely Hart who had been a professor of languages at Princeton University 8 An Act of Assembly approved on April 9 1849 provided that The Controllers of the Public Schools of the First School District of Pennsylvania shall have and possess power to confer academic degrees in the arts upon graduates of the Central High School in the City of Philadelphia and the same and like power to confer degrees honorary and otherwise which is now possessed by the University of Pennsylvania 10 In accordance with this Act the Board of Controllers on September 11 1849 authorized the conferring of appropriate degrees upon graduates of Central High 8 In September 1854 the school transferred to a new building located at the southeast corner of Broad and Green Streets In 1858 President Hart resigned and was succeeded by Nicholas Harper Maguire 8 In October of 1891 a Graduate Course in Pedagogy later called the Philadelphia School of Pedagogy was added to Central as a teacher training program for men 6 The School of Pedagogy was disbanded in 1918 due to numbers of enrollees dwindling as a result of World War I 11 20th century edit In September 1900 the school moved to its third location in a newer and larger building located at Broad Green Fifteenth and Brandywine Streets 8 During the formal dedication on November 22 1902 Theodore Roosevelt President of the United States addressed the students 12 After 139 years of existence as an all male public high school Central s all male policy was challenged by Susan Vorchheimer who wished to be admitted to Central On August 7 1975 U S District Court Judge Clarence C Newcomer ruled that Central must admit academically qualified girls starting in the fall term of 1975 The decision was appealed and the Third Circuit Court ruled that Central had the right to retain its present status 13 The case eventually reached the U S Supreme Court that on April 19 1977 upheld the Third Circuit Court s verdict by a 4 to 4 vote with one abstention That Supreme Court case was called Vorchheimer v School Dist of Philadelphia 14 15 In August 1983 Judge William M Marutani of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas ruled that the single sex admission policy was unconstitutional The Board of Education voted not to appeal the legal decision thereby admitting girls to Central High School In September 1983 the first six girls all seniors were admitted 16 In October 1987 and again in September 2011 17 Central High School was officially named a Secondary school of National Excellence by the United States Department of Education and named a Blue Ribbon School In March 1992 Redbook magazine named Central one of the best schools in Pennsylvania Central was named Best Secondary School in Pennsylvania by the magazine each year since they began rating the nation s best schools citation needed Presidents of Central High School editAlexander Dallas Bache 1839 1842 John Seely Hart 1842 1858 Nicholas Harper Maguire 1858 1866 George Inman Riche 1866 1886 19th Class Franklin Taylor 1886 1888 Henry Clark Johnson 1888 1893 Robert Ellis Thompson 1894 1920 John Louis Haney 1920 1943 100th Class William Hafner Cornog 1943 1955 146th Class Elmer Field 1955 1962 122nd Class William H Gregory 1962 1969 Howard Carlisle 1969 1983 162nd Class Sheldon S Pavel 1984 2012 Timothy J McKenna 2012 2022 Katharine S Davis 2022 present 264th Class Guide to class numbers editSince graduates are usually identified by class number the year they graduated is not immediately apparent This section explains the relation between class number and graduation date The first class graduated in June 1842 Through much of the school s history there were two graduating classes per year in January and June However there was only one graduating class in June in some years including all years after 1965 The following list details the correspondence between class number and graduation date 18 1 June 1842 2 June 1843 3 January 1844 4 June 1844 2 classes per year 75 January 1880 76 June 1880 77 June 1881 78 June 1882 79 January 1883 2 classes per year 95 January 1891 96 June 1891 97 June 1892 1 class per year 116 June 1911 117 January 1912 118 June 1912 2 classes per year 223 January 1965 224 June 1965 225 June 1966 1 class per year Thus for classes graduating after 1965 if one knows the class number one can determine the year of graduation by adding 1741 Conversely if one knows the graduation year one can determine the class number by subtracting 1741 Notable alumni editMain article List of Central High School Philadelphia alumniReferences edit a b c Central HS National Center for Education Statistics Retrieved January 8 2020 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Logan Redevelopment Area Plan Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Philadelphia City Planning Commission May 2002 1 document page 3 Retrieved on August 2 2011 The neighborhood is generally defined as including the area from Wingohocking Street north to Olney Avenue and from Broad Street east to the railroad right of way east of Marshall Street Logan extends west to 16th Street north of Lindley Avenue where Wakefield Park forms the boundary Nitzsche George Erazmus 1918 University of Pennsylvania Its History Traditions Buildings and Memorials Also a Brief Guide to Philadelphia Seventh ed Philadelphia International Printing Company p 290 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Pennsylvania Act of Assembly April 9 1849 About Central Central High School Retrieved 2023 09 30 a b Edmonds Franklin Spencer 1902 History of the Central High School of Philadelphia Philadelphia Lippincott For Our Age and Country Nineteenth Century Art Education at Central High School essay by Amy Werbel Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2015 09 29 a b c d e The Public Schools of Philadelphia Historical Biographical Statistical by John Trevor Custis Burk amp McFetridge Co Publisher 1897 Pg 131 amp c Alexander Dallas Bache 1806 1867 upenn edu Retrieved 3 June 2015 Pepper George Wharton Lewis William Draper eds 1896 A Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania From the Year One Thousand Seven Hundred to the Sixth Day of July One Thousand Eight Hundred and Eighty three Vol 1 Philadelphia T amp J W Johnson amp Co pp 845 All Girl Class No Men No page 2 Philadelphia Inquirer 3 Dec 1918 Skinner Charles R 1902 11 25 Letter from Charles R Skinner to Theodore Roosevelt Theodore Roosevelt Papers Library of Congress Manuscript Division p 161 Vorchheimer v School District of Philadelphia 532 F 2d 880 Third Circuit Court 1976 Vorchheimer v School District of Philadelphia 430 U S 703 97 S Ct 1671 51 L Ed 2d 750 Supreme Court of the United States 1977 Vorchheimer v School Dist of Philadelphia Oyez Robbins William 3 September 1983 Judge Orders Elite Old Philadelphia High School to Admit Girls The New York Times Retrieved 2021 04 19 Central High 6 elementaries bring federal honors to Pa philly archives Retrieved 3 June 2015 Alumni Directory 1995 Associated Alumni of the Central High School of Philadelphia Bernard C Harris Publishing 1995 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Central High School Philadelphia nbsp Philadelphia portal nbsp Schools portal nbsp Pennsylvania portalCurrent Central High School Web site Historical Central High School Web sites from the Wayback Machine September 4 2010 thru March 21 2011 November 19 2000 thru August 13 2010 October 9 1999 thru February 6 2001 April 11 1997 thru April 20 1999 The School District of Philadelphia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Central High School Philadelphia amp oldid 1177989178 Philadelphia School of Pedagogy, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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