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Toledo City School District

Toledo Public Schools
Toledo City School District
Motto "Building for success"
Type Public School District
Academic staff
2,799 (02-03 Annual Report)
Students Grades K-12
: 35,533: (02-03 Annual Report)
Location Toledo, Ohio, U.S.
Website http://www.tps.org/

Toledo Public Schools is a school district headquartered in Toledo, Ohio, United States. The school district serves students of the city of Toledo and is the fourth largest in the state. Dr. Romules Durant became the district's superintendent on August 1, 2013.

Students are allowed to wear any solid colored polo and certain types of pants. High school as of 2016-2017 school year and now own arevallowed to wera anything

Former/Closed High Schools

Pre-Schools K-8 some in 2011-2012 will not be open

(collected from the Woodward Technical High School yearbook 1927-28)

In 1853, the first Toledo high school was built on the block surrounded by Adams, Madison, Michigan, and 10th streets (currently occupied by the Toledo-Lucas County Public Library). The building was finished in 1857 and the first class graduated from Central High School in 1858.

In 1872, Jesup W. Scott selected a body of trustees to establish a “University of Arts and Trades” for the city of Toledo. A donation of $15,000 by trustee William H. Raymond in 1873, followed by a donation of $50,000 by Scott’s family following his death on January 22, 1874 helped set up a school of design in the original high school by January 1875.

Unable to carry out the wishes of donors, the trustees tendered the property to the city of Toledo in January 1884. The Scott Manual Training School was opened and had the distinction of being one of the first such schools to offer courses in Domestic Science. The building was destroyed by a fire in March 1885, but was rebuilt as a much larger structure in 1886 with sixty-one rooms and an auditorium that was larger than the original building.

Until 1913, this was the city’s only high school building except for a few years where the first two years of high school were offered at East Side Central. Students were eventually transferred over to Jesup W. Scott High School in 1913 and Morrison R. Waite High School in 1914.

In January 1912 the Elementary Industrial School was established within the Central building with an emphasis on mechanical drawing and woodwork. When the remaining high school students left for Waite, the industrial school sought a new name. The new school was named Woodward Junior High School for Calvin M. Woodward, an advocate of manual training. When the school added four-year classes, it became Woodward Technical High School.

In 1927, Vocational High School was established in the Woodward Tech building as well. Woodward Tech would move into a new building on Streicher Street in 1928 and become Calvin M. Woodward High School. Vocational High School remained in the old building until 1938 when it moved into a new location on Monroe Street and became Irving E. Macomber Vocational High School.


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