Thomas Jefferson High School | |
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Address | |
400 Pennsylvania Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11207 United States |
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Coordinates | 40°40′01″N 73°53′41″W / 40.666919°N 73.894841°WCoordinates: 40°40′01″N 73°53′41″W / 40.666919°N 73.894841°W |
Information | |
Funding type | Public |
Established | 1922 |
Closed | 2007 |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 1,600 (1991) |
Yearbook | Aurora |
Thomas Jefferson High School was a high school in the East New York section of Brooklyn, New York. It was the alma mater of many people who grew up in the Great Depression and World War II and rose to prominence in the arts, literature, and other fields. In 2007, the New York City Department of Education closed the school and broke it into several small schools because of low graduation rates.
Thomas Jefferson High school, located at 400 Pennsylvania Avenue, had its groundbreaking in 1922 with New York City mayor John Francis Hylan officiating. Thomas Jefferson was one of seven public high schools in New York to receive a M. P. Moller pipe organ in the 1920s.
In 1991, Darryl Sharpe, a ninth-grade student who was an innocent bystander, was shot to death in the school. Another youth was trying to help his brother in a fistfight, drew a gun, and opened fire in the crowded hallway. The three shots killed the 16-year-old student and critically wounded a teacher, Robert Anderson, who was approaching to intervene. At the time, education officials in New York called it "one of the school system's worst crimes" and noted that besides an accidental shooting in 1989, it was the first killing of a student in a school in more than a decade.
In 1992, a 15-year-old student at the school shot two other students, who died thereafter, in the hallway an hour before then-mayor David Dinkins was supposed to tour the school.
In 2007, the New York City Department of Education closed the school and broke it into several small schools because of low graduation rates.