Niles East High School | |
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Address | |
7701 Lincoln Ave. Skokie, Illinois United States |
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Coordinates | 42°01′17″N 87°44′58″W / 42.02149°N 87.74951°W |
Information | |
School type | public secondary |
Opened | 1938 |
Status | closed |
Closed | 1980 |
School district | Niles Twp. HS District 219 |
Grades | 9–12 |
Gender | coed |
Campus | suburban |
School colour(s) |
blue gold |
Athletics conference | Central Suburban League |
Nickname | Trojans |
Newspaper | NileHiLite |
Nobel laureates |
Robert Horvitz (2002, Medicine and Physiology) Martin Chalfie (2008, Chemistry) |
Niles East High School was a public secondary school operated by Niles Township High Schools District 219 in Skokie, Illinois between 1938 and 1980. Its sister schools Niles West High School and Niles North High School remain open.
The school was known as Niles Township High School until Niles West High School opened in 1959. The school sports teams were named the Trojans.
The school's greatest claims to fame are its two Nobel Laureate alumni—perhaps even more notable because the school was open for only 42 years. It ranks high among schools around the world on the list "Nobel Prize laureates by secondary school affiliation."
In 1975 Niles Township High School District 219 announced that Niles East would be closed in 1980 and all students and faculty were moved to Niles West and Niles North.
On the evening of November 2, 1978, then President Jimmy Carter attended a "Get out the Vote" Rally at Niles East, where he was given an honorary diploma from the school.
After Oakton Community College moved from their original Morton Grove campus to Des Plaines, Oakton opened a branch campus in the former Niles East building. District 219 administrative offices were temporarily located in the shuttered Niles East. Centre East for the Performing Arts was located in the former Niles East Auditorium until their current facility opened near Golf Road and Skokie Boulevard.
Oakton Community College demolished the original high school buildings in stages as new buildings opened. The only remaining structures of Niles East as of 2007 are the courtyard flagpole and the basement under the gymnasium that is now used for storage.
Some scenes in the film Risky Business and the John Hughes films Sixteen Candles and Weird Science were filmed during the 1980s at Niles East after it closed.