Lincoln Park High School | |
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Address | |
1701 Champaign Road Lincoln Park, Michigan, Wayne County 48146 United States |
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Coordinates | 42°14′42″N 83°11′20″W / 42.245°N 83.189°WCoordinates: 42°14′42″N 83°11′20″W / 42.245°N 83.189°W |
Information | |
School type | public high school |
Opened | 1957 |
Status | Open |
School district | Lincoln Park Public Schools. |
Superintendent | Terry Dangerfieldl |
Principal | Daniel Mercer |
Grades | 9-12 |
Gender | coed |
Enrollment | 1446 (2010) |
Color(s) | Orange and Blue |
Team name | Railsplitters |
Accreditation | North Central Association |
Yearbook | The Log |
Website | School website |
Lincoln Park High School (LPHS) is a public school in Lincoln Park, Michigan. The school colors are orange and blue, and the teams are called the Railsplitters, a reference to Abraham Lincoln. It is a part of Lincoln Park Public Schools.
LPHS has a student-to-teacher ratio of 35:1 and was given a rating of "C" as of 2010 it has been given a "B" by the Michigan Department of Education in 2007-2008. As of the class of 2011, LPHS has a graduation rate of 63.5% (starting with about 490 students, now having about 232) and an attendance rate of 75%.
LPHS has many programs and extra curricular activities including the Spanish Club, Lincoln Park Building Trades, Guitar Club, Anime Club, JROTC, FIRST Robotics, National Honor Society, four school bands (marching, symphonic, jazz, and concert), E.M.T. Education, Business Management, CADD, Agriscience, and Quiz Bowl.
The current building is the second building in the city to be called "Lincoln Park High School". The previous building was built in 1930, and would later become Leo W. Huff Junior High School (grades 7-9) after serving as the city's high school from 1933 to 1959. It would be the first high school in the state recognized by the University of Michigan before it was accredited by the North Central Association. Huff was closed in the early '80s after diminishing class sizes forced its closing and it remained empty for several years. Due to its age, it was decided by the Board of Education that it could no longer afford to maintain and heat an empty school and the school was demolished.
Prior to 1933, high school classes were held in the Goodell School, located on the northwest corner of Champaign and Fort St, which was demolished in 1971. The bell from this school was saved, and is now in place at the Lincoln Park Historical Museum. This school was the third to hold the name "Goodell School". The first was a wood-framed, single-room school house built in the 1870s, and the second was the brick building built to replace it in 1918.