PhotosLocation


Graham_Elementary_and_Middle_School Latitude and Longitude:

40°00′06″N 83°00′16″W / 40.001606°N 83.004439°W / 40.001606; -83.004439
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Graham Elementary and Middle School
Location140 East 16th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio
Coordinates 40°00′06″N 83°00′16″W / 40.001606°N 83.004439°W / 40.001606; -83.004439
Architect David Riebel
DesignatedDecember 10, 1984
Reference no.CR-33

Graham Elementary and Middle School (formerly Graham Expeditionary Middle School and Graham Primary School) is a public K-8 charter school in Columbus, Ohio. It was originally the Indianola Junior High School, the first junior high school in the United States. [1] The building was owned by the Columbus City Schools, though it became operated by the Graham Family of Schools, and was sold to the organization in 2017. [2] 2009 was the middle school's centennial year. Shortly thereafter, the school board closed that building for the 2010 school year and merged the school with the former Indianola Alternative School (see below). [3]

History

The Columbus Board of Education formally approved the creation of junior high schools in Columbus, Ohio on July 6, 1909, with Indianola Junior High School being the first. Its school building, located at 140 East 16th Avenue in Columbus, still stands. In 1929, the school moved to a new building on 19th Avenue. [4]

Largely because of increasing enrollment demands, in 2007 Indianola students moved to the old Everett Jr. High, which had been occupied by the Arts Impact Middle School. The Indianola building was left vacant. The building remained vacant until the Graham Expeditionary Middle School opened in 2010. [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ohio History Central
  2. ^ https://www.dispatch.com/news/20170404/columbus-schools-sell-2-buildings-to-charter-3rd-to-another-buyer [ bare URL]
  3. ^ Board votes to close 9 city schools
  4. ^ Tebben, Gerald (September 7, 2012). "Columbus Mileposts | Sept. 7, 1909: Indianola Junior High first of its kind in U.S." Retrieved November 12, 2016.
  5. ^ "Number of charter academies jumps with effort to lure dropouts". The Columbus Dispatch. September 13, 2010. Retrieved November 12, 2016.

External links