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  1. Germantown High School was a secondary school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Germantown High School graduated its final class on June 19, 2013 and closed its doors that week. [1] GHS, located in Germantown, was a part of the School District of Philadelphia . The school was built in 1914.

  2. 17 nov 2023 · Germantown High School. Mixed-use Development. A historic school building in Germantown is slated to reopen by next summer — more than a decade after academic performance and shrinking ...

    • Aaron Moselle, WHYY
  3. 20 gen 2024 · Just over a decade ago, Germantown High School was shut down due to its academic performance, shrinking enrollment, and a financial crisis. However, next year, the space will be converted into a new mixed-use development with about 240 apartments, writes Aaron Moselle for WHYY.

  4. 17 nov 2023 · A historic school building in Germantown is slated to reopen by next summer — more than a decade after academic performance and shrinking enrollment closed the hulking property amid a financial crisis at the School District of Philadelphia.

    • Aaron Moselle
  5. 4 mag 2015 · Germantown High School was built in 1914, making it one of the oldest schools in the United States. Photo courtesy of the Germantown Historical Society. It was in the 1960s that Germantown Highs bleak future began to form.

    • Germantown High School (Philadelphia)1
    • Germantown High School (Philadelphia)2
    • Germantown High School (Philadelphia)3
    • Germantown High School (Philadelphia)4
    • Germantown High School (Philadelphia)5
  6. 19 giu 2013 · Germantown High was born into an industrial, working-class neighborhood. Its job was to turn out graduates ready to step into industrial jobs. According to a district report from 1922, the students trained in a joinery shop, turning shop, pattern shop, chipping and filing shop, forge shop and a machine shop that was called one of the finest in ...

  7. 1 giu 2023 · Germantown High School in northwest Philadelphia, a public school opened in 1915 and closed in 2013, is the focus of Erika M. Kitzmiller's fascinating study that argues against the dominant narrative of urban public school decline in the twentieth century.