Sumner High School (St. Louis)

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Sumner High School
Location
4248 Cottage Avenue
St. Louis, MO 63113

Information
School district St. Louis Public Schools
Principal Sherman Curtis
Enrollment

1,193 (as of 2005-06)[1]

Faculty 77.0 (on FTE basis)[1]
Student:teacher ratio 15.5[1]
Type Public high school
Grades 9-12
Nickname Bulldogs
Established 1875
Information 314-371-1048
Homepage

Sumner High School, also known as Charles E. Sumner High School, is a four-year public high school in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, operated as part of the St. Louis Public Schools.

As of the 2005-06 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,193 students and 77.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student-teacher ratio of 15.5.[1]

Contents

[edit] School mission

The mission of the school states purpose to be responsive to the academic, social, civic, and developmental needs of their students, "including training them to be successful, functioning graduates," so that they can make worthy "contributions to themselves, their families, school and community in today’s global society."[2]

[edit] History

Sumner High, opened in 1875, and was the first high school opened for African-Americans west of the Mississippi.[3][4] The school is named after the well-known abolitionist senator Charles E. Sumner.[5] The high school was established, on Eleventh Street - in St. Louis - between Poplar and Spruce, in response to demands to provide educational opportunities, following a requirement that school boards support black education with The Radical Constitution of 1865 in Missouri.[6] The school was moved in the 1880s because because parents complained that their children were walking past the gallows on their way to school.[5] Sumner was the only Black public high school in St. Louis until 1927.[5]

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Sumner High School, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed December 12, 2007.
  2. ^ St. Louis Public Schools, "Sumner MEGA High School". Retrieved on 2007-12-11.
  3. ^ a b c d "TRAVEL ADVISORY; Black History in St. Louis", The New York Times, May 10, 1992. Accessed December 11, 2007. "Sumner High School, the first school west of the Mississippi for blacks, established in 1875 (among graduates are Grace Bumbry, Arthur Ashe and Tina Turner)..."
  4. ^ Charles Sumner H.S., an American Black academic beginning
  5. ^ a b c 130 Years of Sumner High School (St. Louis)
  6. ^ Primm, James Neal. (1998). Lion of the Valley: St. Louis, Missouri, 1764-1980. St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society.
  7. ^ Weinraub, Bernard. "Sweet Tunes, Fast Beats and a Hard Edge", The New York Times, February 23, 2003. Accessed December 11, 2007. "A significant moment in his early life was a musical performance in 1941 at Sumner High School, which had a middle-class black student body."
  8. ^ Dick Gregory , AEI Speakers Bureau. Accessed December 11, 2007. " A track star at Sumner High School, Gregory earned an athletic scholarship in 1951 to Southern Illinois University at Carbondale and became the first member of his family to attend college. "
  9. ^ Robert McFerrin Sr. (1921–2006), Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture. Accessed December 12, 2007. "His father arranged for him to attend Sumner High School in St. Louis, Missouri. McFerrin intended to become an English teacher but changed his career plans after he joined the high school choir and received his first formal music instruction under chorus director Wirt Walton."

[edit] External links