Seattle Public Schools
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Seattle Public Schools is the school district for the city of Seattle, Washington. It is the largest public school system in Washington, and the 44th largest in the United States, with 47,449 students in 2002.
There are 62 elementary schools, 11 middle schools, 16 high schools, one K-12 school, and eight K-8 schools in the district. The high schools are:
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Schools
High schools
- Ballard High School, Ballard
- The Center School, Seattle Center
- Chief Sealth High School, West Seattle
- Grover Cleveland High School, Beacon Hill
- Benjamin Franklin High School, Mount Baker — notable alumni: Kenny G, George H. Hitchings
- James A. Garfield High School, Central District
- Ingraham High School, Haller Lake
- John Marshall High School, Green Lake
- Middle College High School, Northgate
- Nathan Hale High School, Lake City
- The Nova Project, Central District
- Rainier Beach High School, Rainier Beach
- Theodore Roosevelt High School, Roosevelt — notable alumnae: Betty MacDonald, Rose McGowan
- Seattle Evening School at John Marshall (see John Marshall High School above)
- South Lake High School, Rainier Beach
- West Seattle High School, West Seattle -- notable alumna: Frances Farmer
Middle schools
- Denny Middle School
- Eckstein Middle School
- Hamilton Middle School
- Aki Kurose Middle School Academy
- Madison Middle School
- McClure Middle School
- Meany Middle School
- Mercer Middle School
- Seahawks Academy
- Washington Middle School
- Whitman Middle School
Elementary schools
Former schools
Former high schools include:
- Broadway High School (closed 1946 after having lost a quarter of its students to the Japanese internment; incorporated into what is now Seattle Central Community College), Capitol Hill
- Abraham Lincoln High School (closed 1981), Wallingford. The former Lincoln building has been used as a temporary location for other high schools; see Wallingford, Seattle, Washington.
- Queen Anne High School (closed 1981, now an apartment building), Queen Anne
External links
- Seattle Public Schools (http://www.seattleschools.org/)