Lake Clifton Eastern High School | |
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Address | |
2801 Saint Lo Drive Baltimore, Maryland 21213 |
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Information | |
School type | Public, Defunct, Comprehensive |
Motto | "We Learn from Today, We Experience Yesterday, We Hope for Tomorrow!" |
Founded | 1970 |
Sister school | Eastern High School |
School district | Baltimore City Public Schools |
School number | 40 |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 2,400 (appx.) (2003) |
Area | Urban |
Color(s) | Blue, Gold, Green |
Slogan | "Home of the Lakers" |
Mascot | Dolphin |
Team name | Lakers |
Lake Clifton Eastern High School (LCEHS) was a public high school located in the northeast area known as Clifton Park of Baltimore, Maryland. Originally called Lake Clifton High School (LCHS), although it was commonly known as Lake High School or Lake Clifton, it is now officially named the Lake Clifton Campus (LCC).
Along with Walbrook and Southwestern High Schools, LCHS was constructed in the early 1970s, and opened in September 1971, named after the Lake Clifton Reservoir and the Clifton Park neighborhood where it was located. Designed during the post-World War II "Baby Boom" years of the 1960s to relieve overcrowding in the city's public high schools, particularly nearby Baltimore City College (City HS), the third oldest public high school in America (founded 1839), and Eastern High School (EHS). Both had about 4,000 students each, twice their maximum capacity.
In 1986, with the closure of EHS, the two schools merged, and LCHS was officially renamed Lake Clifton Eastern High School, however after the 2002-03 school year, LCEHS was also closed. Two smaller secondary schools, Heritage High School and the REACH! Partnership School occupy the campus. In 2013, Amanda Brown and Ronnie Faulcon Jr. and many others graduated and are now good scholars.
A reservoir named "Lake Clifton Reservoir" occupied the site and was in use until the late 1960s. The reservoir was drained and became the site for the high school's construction in 1970-71. Originally known as "Lake Clifton High School". At the time it was constructed, the school's property area of 441.11 acres (178.51 ha) made it the largest physical plant high school on the East Coast of the United States. In Lake Clifton's 2002 yearbook, it states that LCEHS "was [in the early 70s], and perhaps remains, the largest physical plant high school in the nation." The cost of constructing and equipping LCHS was approximately $17 million in 1970, which adjusting for inflation, would be approximately $99,258,764.27 in 2010. The school was designed to hold 4,800 students.