Beaumont Middle School is a decommissioned middle school located in Kissimmee, Florida. Beaumont once served as the magnet middle school for the Osceola County region. Other students, many under protest, were relegated to Denn John Middle School, located on the outskirts of Kissimmee, FL, while Beaumont celebrated its proximity to the seat of Osceola County government and center of its commerce at Lat: 28.29528 Lon: -81.41056.
Beaumont was built a few blocks from Lake Toho and downtown Kissimmee, at the corner of Beaumont and Sumner St. Classes ceased in the main High School building in 1975. During the 1974-1975 school year, the student body was cut in half, with those generally north and east of the campus being assigned to the new Denn- John school which was under construction. Those assigned to Denn-John were placed in classrooms in the old original Osceola High School building, and those assigned to stay at Beaumont Middle occupied the newer section of campus. Common areas such as the cafeteria, shop, PE and Home Ec. were shared. Each school had its own office and administrators, the office for Denn John being in the Old building. In January 1975, the new Denn-John middle school campus was completed, and all the students assigned to that school moved to the new campus. At that time the Original Osceola High School building was no longer being used for students. The School Districts Audio-visual department and 16MM film library continued to be housed at that site, as it had been for several years prior to the closure to students in 1975.
The property however remained in use by the County as a textbook storage facility and by truant students looking for a quick smokesess.
Recently, the location was investigated by treasure hunters, who found many unique items, but no American Civil War musket balls. [1]
During its operations, Beaumont drew the ire of various human rights organizations who decried its practices of corporal punishment on the student body. Unaccredited eyewitnesses describe instances of 14- and 15-year-old male and female students being paddled repeatedly on the buttocks by administrators behind closed doors for such indiscretions as gum chewing and running in the halls. Rumors abound of a certain instrument of punishment utilized by school officials nicknamed "The Purple Passion." Despite its critics, the State of Florida officially supported such practices. [2] Opponents cite to studies which suggested that corporal punishment was racially biased in its execution. See for example: "The University of Florida 'Alligator' vs. The Educational Establishment: Why More Blacks?", Ibid., Vol. 12, No. 2, p. 10; "Task Force At Odds Over Spanking Law: Florida Doesn't Like First Place", Ibid., p. 11; "3000 Paddlings a Year on 500 Students", Ibid., Vol. 13, No. 2 (Winter, 1985), p. 19.