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  1. Spingarn High School. Joel Elias Spingarn High School was a public high school located in the District of Columbia, USA. The school is named after Joel Elias Spingarn (1875–1939) an American educator and literary critic who established the Spingarn Medal in 1913, awarded annually for outstanding achievement by an African American.

  2. Spingarn High School. Location: Carver Langston neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Type: Public high school. Year Opened: 1952. Year Closed: 2013. Reason for Closure: Low enrollment. Last Segregated High School Built in Washington, D.C. Named After: Joel Elias Spingarn (1875–1939) Principal at Closure: Gary Washington.

  3. Joel Elias Spingarn High School was a public high school located in the District of Columbia, USA. The school is named after Joel Elias Spingarn (1875–1939) an American educator and literary critic who established the Spingarn Medal in 1913, awarded annually for outstanding achievement by an African American.

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  5. Built between 1951 and 1952, Spingarn High School was constructed for the education of African American students, meant to relieve the overcrowding of the other segregated high schools and had been planned for that purpose since the late 1930s. Desegregation lawsuits of the late 1940s and early 1950s finally prodded the District to construct the building. Its postwar construction represented ...

  6. In August, 1995 the first attempt to raise funds to meet the goal of the Spingarn Alumni Association was a Salute to Dr. Purvis J. Williams (the first Principal of Spingarn Senior High School) in recognition of his dedicated and distinguished service and contributions of personal time and effort to the ideals of excellence in education in ...

  7. dcps DC Public Schools . DC Agency Top Menu. አማርኛ; Français; 中文; Español; Tiêng Viêt

  8. The school is named after Joel Elias Spingarn , a white-American Jewish educator and activist. Spingarn High School opened as a new modern high school, the last segregated high school built in Washington, DC, just two years before the U.S. Supreme Court ended school segregation in Brown v. Board of Education. The formal dedication ceremonies in ...

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