George Washington Educational Campus
Coordinates: 40°51′21″N 73°55′37″W / 40.855819°N 73.926952°W
George Washington High School | |
---|---|
(2014) | |
Address | |
549 Audubon Avenue New York City, New York 10040 | |
Information | |
Principal | Harris Marmor, Nicholas Politis, Peter Sloman |
Grades | 9-12 |
Language | English |
Color(s) | Orange and black |
Mascot | Trojans |
Team name | Trojans, Lady Trojans |
The George Washington Educational Campus is a facility of the New York City Department of Education located at 549 Audubon Avenue at West 193rd Street in the Fort George neighborhood of the Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York City. Within the building are located four schools:
- The first floor is the High School for Media and Communications (M463)
- The second floor houses The College Academy, formerly the High School for International Business and Finance (M462)
- The third floor houses the High School for Health Careers and Sciences (M468)
- The fourth floor houses the High School for Law and Public Service (M467)
The building was opened on February 2, 1917, as an annex of Morris High School. George Washington High School was founded in 1919, and moved into the building in 1925. It was known by that name until 1999, when the building was divided into the four small schools.
George Washington Education Campus has a Works Progress Administration (WPA) mural, The Evolution of Music, painted by Lucienne Bloch in 1938. This mural was painted in a room originally used as a music room and later as a dance studio.
ID cards where first used in the school in February 1972 for students and staff. Currently, the building has scanning machines. In order to enter the building, one must go through scanning.
New York-Presbyterian Hospital maintains a clinic on the first floor.
Sports
In 1989, the Trojan American football team won the 1989 City "B" Division Championship. They defeated Lincoln H.S. in the championship game. On November 23, 2008, the squad defeated Far Rockaway High School (Queens), 20–14, in an overtime finish at the Midwood Athletic Complex in Brooklyn. The victory earned GW the 2008 PSAL Cup Championship, their first football title since 1988. Far Rock beat GW 38–8 in the season opener. It was their only loss of the season. The Trojans won their next nine games, holding their last four opponents to a total of 21 points. That included defeating previously unbeaten South Bronx HS, 24–8, to earn the trip to the championship game.
On June 6, 2008, the George Washington Trojans baseball team beat the Jameds Madison Knights, with an 11th-inning finish of 4-0, to win the Division "A" City Championship at Shea Stadium.
On June 9, 2006, the George Washington Trojans (baseball team) went to the championship to play against James Monroe High School of the Bronx but lost the championship to Monroe. #1 James Monroe 4, #3 George Washington 0. In 2004, the team went to the championship to play against Monroe High School of the Bronx but lost the championship.
In 2000, the baseball/football/track field was fixed by the City of New York and some players with the New York Yankees were there to help.
- 1983: cross country Division champions
- 1928, 1974: baseball PSAL champions
- 1973: soccer PSAL champions
- 2008: Varsity baseball team win in Shea Stadium
- 1988, 2008 and 2013: American football champions
- American football team: 1928 – present (no team in the late 1950s and 1960s)
- Baseball: 1928 – present
- Basketball: 1950s - present
- Softball: 1980s - present
- Volleyball: 1920s - present
- Cheerleading: 2006 – present
Baseball coach Steve Mandl won three championships in 27 years. He was suspended by the PSAL for 16 months for "recruiting violations" and was reinstated to his job thereafter; the case prompted questions about how the PSAL handles charges brought without witnesses or evidence. According to The New York Times, "The Mandl case offers another perspective: the possibility that petty, meritless charges can get traction and turn the disciplinary process itself into a form of punishment long before a verdict has been reached." [1]
Notable alumni
Notable alumni include:
- Moshe Arens (born 1925), former Israel Minister of Defense, Minister of Foreign Affairs, member of Knesset with the Likud Party
- Harry Belafonte (born 1927), actor and singer.[2]
- Rod Carew (born 1945), Major League Baseball Hall of Famer.[3]
- Gene Colan (1926-2011), Marvel and DC Comics artist, Comic Book Hall of Fame
- Alan Greenspan (born 1926), economist, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve.[3]
- Morris Halle (born 1923), Institute Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
- Murray Jarvik, (1923–2008) UCLA pharmacologist who showed that nicotine was the addictive factor in tobacco and invented the nicotine patch for smokers trying to quit [4]
- Jacob Javits (1904–1986), senator and state attorney general
- Marvin Kalb (born 1930), veteran American journalist
- John George Kemeny (1926–1992), atomic scientist and computer-science pioneer.[5]
- Henry Kissinger (born 1923), former United States Secretary of State, 1973 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.[3]
- Sue Mengers (born 1931), Hollywood talent agent
- Hyman Minsky (1919-1996), economist, Professor of Economics at Washington University in St. Louis.
- Edwin Newman (1919–2010), journalist, graduated in 1935
- Ron Perlman (born 1950), actor, graduated in 1967
- Irving Peress (born 1917), dentist target of Joseph McCarthy. Graduated 1935.
- Milly Quezada (born 1955), singer, actress, graduated about 1972
- Manny Ramírez (born 1972), Major League Baseball player for the Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Oakland Athletics (did not graduate)[3]
- Guy Williams (1924–1989), Hollywood actor
References
Notes
- ↑ "Baseball coach Steve Mandl suspended before a hearing is held", New York Times, February 1, 2012
- ↑ Arenson, Karen W. "Commencements; Belafonte Lauds Diversity Of Baruch College Class", The New York Times, June 2, 2000. Accessed April 16, 2008. "(He said that he had not gotten past the first year at George Washington High School, and that the only college degrees he had were honorary ones.)"
- 1 2 3 4 David Leonhardt. "Economist’s Life, Scored With Jazz Theme", The New York Times, September 18, 2007. Accessed April 16, 2008. "He attended George Washington High School a few years behind Henry Kissinger (and a few decades before the baseball stars Rod Carew and Manny Ramirez, a historical oddity that Mr. Greenspan, who still remembers Joe DiMaggio’s 1936 batting average, probably appreciates)."
- ↑ Sydney Morning Herald Obituaries of 16 May 2008
- ↑ Faison, Seth. " John Kemeny, 66, Computer Pioneer and Educator", The New York Times, December 27, 1992. Accessed April 16, 2008. ""When he arrived with his family in New York City in 1940, Dr. Kemeny attended George Washington High School. Three years later he graduated at the top of his class."
Sources
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Washington Educational Campus. |
- NYC Dept of Education official websites for the four academies:
- George Washington High School profile provided by schooltree.org
- A site made by Media & Communication from the George Washington high school campus class of 2005