Colonel William A. Phillips

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Lowell High School is a single-campus public high school located in downtown Lowell, Massachusetts, United States. The school is a part of Lowell Public Schools. The mascot is the Red Raider and the colors are maroon & gray. Current enrollment is over 3,000 students.

History

Lowell, Massachusetts was incorporated as a town in 1826 and Lowell High School opened shortly after in 1831. One of its earliest homes was a small brick building on Middlesex Street owned by the Hamilton Manufacturing Company.[4] Lowell High School was the first and remains the oldest desegregated public high school in the United States; African American Caroline Van Vronker was a student at Lowell High School in 1843, at a time when every other public high school in the United States was segregated.[5]

In 1840, the high school moved into a new building located between Kirk Street and Anne Street along the Merrimack Canal. Over the next 100 years, the school campus expanded.[6] The oldest extant building replaced the 1840s building in 1893.[7] In 1922, a large new building was built along Kirk Street and in the 1980s another building was built on the opposite side of the Merrimack Canal with connecting walkways over the canal. There are now three major buildings with one limited to the Freshman Academy.

Lowell High School Clock, a gift from three classes, is frequently used as a symbol of the school (2007).

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ "Lowell High". MA Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Lowell High". MA Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
  3. ^ "Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education - 2019-20 SAT Performance Report - All Students Statewide Report".
  4. ^ Lowell School Committee Report, Lowell, MA. 1832
  5. ^ Mayor Elisha Huntington, Report to Boston School Committee. Lowell, MA. 1846
  6. ^ Lowell School Committee Report, Lowell, MA. 1841
  7. ^ "UMass Lowell Library | UMass Lowell" (PDF).
  8. ^ "'He's a real Lowell story' — so where is the city's love for Billy Sullivan?". 18 August 2009.
  9. ^ Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Adams, Clay, Hall and Hamilton Counties, Nebraska. Chicago, IL: Goodspeed Publishing Co. 1890. p. 728 – via HathiTrust.

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