This is the list of schools within the Seattle Public Schools school district. Seattle Public Schools operates elementary schools, K-8 schools, middle schools serving grades 6–8, high schools, and Alternative schools and special programs.[1][2] The tables below provide data on the demographics of students in Seattle Public Schools. All data is obtained from the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) of Washington state and is from October 2007.[3]

Current Schools

Elementary schools

SchoolEst.[upper-alpha 1]Neighborhood[upper-alpha 2]NicknameSpring 2023 Enrollment[4]
Adams1889[lower-alpha 1]BallardEagles319
Alki1913[lower-alpha 2]AlkiSeagulls298
Arbor Heights1948Arbor HeightsJr. Seahawks518
Bailey Gatzert1921AtlanticBears364
Daniel Bagley1907[lower-alpha 3]Green LakeBees323
Beacon Hill Int'l1899Beacon HillTigers341
Bryant1919RavennaHawks487
Frantz Coe1905Queen AnneCougars456
Cascadia2013Green LakeDragons504
Cedar Park1959Lake CityWolves247
Concord Int'l1914South ParkN/A304
B.F. Day1892[lower-alpha 4]FremontSun Dragons397
Dearborn Park Int'l1971Beacon HillDragons355
Decatur2017WedgwoodGators208
Dunlap1898DunlapDolphins297
Emerson1909Rainier BeachEagles329
Fairmount Park1955Fairmount ParkFalcons442
Gatewood1910GatewoodGators366
Genesee Hill2016West SeattleRed Foxes514
Graham Hill1961Seward ParkWhales266
Green Lake1902[lower-alpha 5]Green LakeDragons339
Greenwood1909GreenwoodStars346
Hawthorne[lower-alpha 6]1913[lower-alpha 7]Mount BakerPhoenix360
John Hay1905[lower-alpha 8]Queen AnneJaguars275
Highland Park1919DelridgeMustangs305
Kimball[lower-alpha 9]1971North Beacon HillCougars376
Lafayette1893[lower-alpha 10]North AdmiralLeopards491
Laurelhurst1928LaurelhurstBears280
Lawton[lower-alpha 11]1913[lower-alpha 12]MagnoliaDolphins333
Leschi1909[lower-alpha 13]LeschiBulldog Pups305
Lowell1890[lower-alpha 14]Capitol HillDragons385
Loyal Heights1919[lower-alpha 15]BallardBeavers499
Madrona2000MadronaPanthers231
Magnolia1927MagnoliaOrcas358
Maple1865[lower-alpha 16]Beacon HillMonarchs436
Thurgood Marshall1909[lower-alpha 17]AtlanticBulldog Pups477
Martin Luther King Jr.1904[lower-alpha 18]Brighton286
McDonald Int'l1914[lower-alpha 19]WallingfordScotties456
McGilvra1899[lower-alpha 20]Madison ParkWildcats222
Montlake1924MontlakeWolves181
John Muir1910Mount BakerLions346
North Beach1958BallardSeals365
Northgate1956NorthgateEagles213
Olympic Hills1954Olympic HillsOtters502
Olympic View1903Maple LeafEagles365
Queen AnneQueen AnneExplorers199
John Rogers1956MeadowbrookOtters262
Rainier View1953Rainier ValleyTigers230
Rising Star1907[lower-alpha 21]South Beacon HillFirebirds342
Roxhill1958RoxhillStars290
Sacajawea1955Maple LeafEagles231
Sand Point1958WindermereSquirrels199
Sanislo1970Riverview180
John Stanford Int'l1891Wallingford429
Stevens1906Capitol HillN/A165
Thornton Creek1961[lower-alpha 22]WedgwoodDragonflies456
View Ridge1948View RidgeOtters305
Viewlands1954BroadviewBears272
Wedgwood1955WedgwoodDolphins359
West SeattleWest SeattleHuskies386
West Woodland1910[lower-alpha 23]BallardWildcats397
Whittier1908[lower-alpha 24]BallardWildcats364
Wing Luke1967[lower-alpha 25]South Beacon HillDragons321

Grades K–8 Schools

SchoolEst.[upper-alpha 3]Location[upper-alpha 4]NicknameSpring 2023 Enrollment[4]
Catharine Blaine1998MagnoliaTigers460
Louisa Boren STEM2012Delridge490
Broadview-Thomson2008BroadviewBulldogs567
Cascade Parent PartnershipQueen Anne327
Hazel Wolf2009Pinehurst, Seattle720
Licton Springs2014Licton Springs, Seattle118
ORCA1989Columbia City392
Pathfinder1994Delridge465
Salmon Bay1999BallardPanthers660
South ShoreRainier BeachSea Dragons607
TOPS1976EastlakeFalcons478

Ref:[2]

Middle Schools, Grades 6–8

SchoolEst.[upper-alpha 5]Location[upper-alpha 6]NicknameSpring 2023 Enrollment[4]
Denny1952[lower-alpha 26]West SeattleDolphins808
Eckstein1950Bryant/WedgwoodEagles1,048
Hamilton1927WallingfordHawks927
Aki Kurose1952Columbia CityPeace Cranes773
Jane Addams2014WedgwoodJaguars881
Madison1929West SeattleBulldogs985
McClure1964Queen AnneMavericks427
Meany1902Capitol HillMountain Lions506
Mercer1957Beacon HillMustangs850
Robert Eagle Staff2017Licton SpringsRavens685
Washington1978Central DistrictJunior Huskies558
Whitman1959Blue RidgeWildcats677

High Schools, Grades 9–12

SchoolEst.[upper-alpha 7]Location[upper-alpha 8]NicknameSpring 2023 Enrollment[4]
Ballard1903[lower-alpha 27]BallardBeavers1,591
The Center School2001Lower Queen Anne
(Seattle Center)
Dragons226
Chief Sealth1967West SeattleSeahawks1,222
Cleveland1927Beacon HillEagles900
Franklin1912Mount BakerQuakers1,220
Garfield1920Central DistrictBulldogs1,604
Lincoln1907WallingfordLynx1,649
Middle College1990Seattle96
Nathan Hale1963MeadowbrookRaiders1,089
Ingraham1959Haller LakeRams1,420
Nova1970Capitol Hill252
Rainier Beach1960Rainier BeachVikings777
Roosevelt1922RooseveltRough Riders1,513
Seattle World School2016Capitol HillWolves210
Alan T. Sugiyama2009[lower-alpha 28]Rainier BeachBlue Sharks40
West Seattle1917West SeattleWildcats1,319

Historic School Properties

All of these buildings pictured below are official city landmarks, as are the following past and present schools:

Former schools

Jr. high schools and middle schools previously included in district:

  • Jane Addams Jr. High School. Built 1949 as part of the Shoreline School District. Annexed by Seattle 1954. Closed 1984; used since 1985 by Summit K-12. Its excellent auditorium has been used for a variety of purposes, including as a temporary substitute for the University of Washington's Meany Auditorium after the 1965 earthquake and, more recently, by the Civic Light Opera.[6]
  • Louisa Boren Jr. High School (1963–1978; then Middle School until 1981). Housed various programs 1981–1989, including Indian Heritage School. Since 1989 it has been used as a temporary site for schools undergoing renovations.[7]
  • Model Middle School (1970–1973), antecedent of South Shore Middle School.[8]
  • R.H. Thomson Jr. High (1962–1981); the building is now the site of Broadview-Thomson Elementary.[9]
  • (Woodrow) Wilson Jr. High. Opened 1953 by Shoreline School District, annexed 1954, added to several times. Became Wilson Middle School 1971. Closed as middle school 1978. Served as Wilson-Pacific School (special education for the mildly disabled) 1978–1989. Then briefly housed COHO Alternative School, and housed American Indian Heritage School 1989–2000, its longest time in one place as of 2007.[10]

Elementary schools previously included in district:

  • (John B.) Allen School. Built 1905. Became the Phinney Neighborhood Center 1981.[11]
  • Beacon Hill School. Became El Centro de la Raza, 1972.[12]
  • Bell Town School. Built 1876. Sold 1884 when the Denny School (see below) opened. Became a private residence, then an apartment/rooming house, eventually torn down.[13]
  • Briarcliff School. Opened 1949 as annex to the Magnolia School, became independent 1951. Known as Briarcliff-Hawthorne 1978–1984 after a merger as part of desegregation. Closed 1984.[14]
  • Brighton Beach School. Before the opening of the current Brighton Elementary, another school of the same name was opened by the Columbia School District, 1901. Closed 1905 when the Brighton School opened. Annexed with Columbia City 1907 and reopened for one year as Brighton Beach School, an annex to the Brighton School; used again 1916–1922 as Brighton Annex. Removed from site 1943. This site is currently used for Graham Hill Elementary School.[15]
  • Broadview School. Opened 1914 by Oak Lake School District. Annexed by Shoreline School District 1944 and then by Seattle 1954. Greatly expanded 1964. Closed 1984, merged into Broadview-Thomson. Demolished in 1989, it is now the site of Ida Culver House-Broadview.[16]
  • Cascade School. This school, opened in 1895, closed in 1949 and demolished in 1955, stood at Pontius Avenue N. and Thomas Street in the Cascade neighborhood. Its playfield is now the Cascade Playground.[17]
  • Colman School. Built 1909. It is now the Northwest African American Museum, opened March 8, 2008.
  • Crown Hill School. Built 1919 as an annex to the Whittier School. Became independent 1942. Addition to building 1949. Closed 1979. As of 2007, home of Small Faces Child Development Center.[18][19]
  • Duwamish Bend School / Holgate School. Opened 1943 in units of the then-new (but short-lived) Duwamish Bend housing project as an annex to the Georgetown School, it acquired a building of its own in 1944. It operated as an independent school 1945–1954 and then one more year as an annex to Georgetown; renamed Holgate in 1952. From 1955, it served in various technical school and special school capacities until 1966 when it became the antecedent of South Seattle Community College, and was torn down once SCCC was completed.[20] The related Holgate Aircraft Branch is still part of SCCC as the Duwamish Industrial Center.[21]
  • Fairview School, built 1908, added to 1928, closed 1976, sold 1985. Now Fairview Church and Fairview Christian School (private non-denominational Christian K-8).[22]
  • Fauntleroy School, in the Fauntleroy neighborhood of West Seattle. Opened 1906, annexed to Seattle School District in 1908, as West Seattle was annexed in 1907. Operated as an annex to South Seattle School 1908–1910 and Gatewood 1910–1911; destroyed by fire 1911.[23]
  • Georgetown School. Built 1900 when Georgetown was still a separate city. Known as Mueller School 1903–1910. Building moved 1907. Annexed (with Georgetown itself) to Seattle 1910, renamed back to Georgetown School. Closed 1971. Used for some alternative school programs and for a community center, before its two separate buildings were torn down in 1981 and 1984, respectively.[24]
  • (Nellie) Goodhue School. Opened in 1946 by Shoreline School District as Shoreline Health and Guidance Center. Annexed by Seattle 1954 and used as the Nellie Goodhue School for mentally handicapped children, superseding the Woodhull Hay School (also part of the Shoreline district founded in 1954). Until 1957, was an annex to Northgate, then independent. Closed as a school in 1961, as Seattle Schools integrated special education students. Returned to its role as guidance center / student services building, now known as the Northend Annex.[25][26]
  • Haller Lake School. Founded 1924 as part of Oak Lake School district, repeatedly added to, annexed by Shoreline in 1943 and by Seattle in 1954. Closed 1979, it was soon sold to the private Lakeside School, which used the building until 1999, when it was torn down to be replaced by their new middle school.[27]
  • Head of the Bay School was a short-lived school (1890–1892), near the southeast end of Elliott Bay before the dredging and filling that has transformed that area. Never officially a Seattle school, although that area is now part of Seattle.[28]
  • E.C. Hughes School. Opened as an unnamed school in portable buildings in Olympic Heights (then known as West Hill) in 1913; named as West Hill School in 1918; moved to permanent site in 1920, as an annex to Gatewood School. In 1926 it was renamed as E.C. Hughes. Operated until 1989, used for storage until 1998, then revived as an interim site while Highland Park Elementary underwent repairs.[29]
  • Interbay School, 1903–1939, demolished 1948.[30]
  • Interlake School, 1904–1971, then briefly an annex to Lincoln High School. Since 1982, the mixed-use Wallingford Center.[31]
  • (Washington) Irving School. Founded 1902 as East Side School in then-independent Ballard. Annexed with Ballard itself, 1907. Renamed Washington Irving 1910. Closed 1915. Reopened as Ballard Special School 1918, renamed Robert Fulton Adjustment School 1929, closed 1932. Used as storehouse until 1937, then WPA offices until 1942, when it was sold.[32]
  • Jefferson School, 1912–1979, demolished 1982, now the site of mixed-use Jefferson Square one block southeast of the West Seattle Junction.[33]
  • (Martin Luther) King Elementary School. (1913[34]-2007). Merged into T.T. Minor starting with 2007–08 school year due to decreasing enrollment in the district.[35]
    • Previously (until 1974) Harrison School[34]
  • Lake City School. Original building opened 1914 in Lake City School District, annexed by Shoreline 1944, building became annex to new Lake City School 1952, annexed to Seattle 1954, closed 1958, demolished, site used for Lake City branch of Seattle Public Library. Second building opened 1931, successively added to, underwent same annexations. Closed 1981, its former playground is now a park and the building itself was remodeled as the Lake City Professional Center.[36]
  • Maple Leaf School. There have been three Maple Leaf Schools in what is now Seattle. The first (built 1896, burned around 1910) was along the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (now Burke-Gilman Trail) near Matthews Beach. The other two (1910–1926 and 1926–1979, respectively) were in the neighborhood that retains the name Maple Leaf. Annexed to Shoreline district 1944, to Seattle 1953. The second building was used as a VFW hall for some years and the third as a vo-tech school; both were eventually demolished.[37]
  • (Horace) Mann School. Originally Walla Walla School. Originally a 1901 annex to the T.T. Minor School, it soon became a school in its own right. Renamed after Horace Mann in 1921, it remained an elementary school until 1968. It served as the music annex to nearby Garfield High School 1969–1970, and served as the site of the NOVA program until late 2009, when the school relocated to the former Meany Middle School building.[38]
  • McDonald School, 1913–1981. Then served as the cradle of what became Bastyr University, and has been used since as an interim site for other schools undergoing renovation.[39] On October 7, 2009 the Seattle School District announced McDonald would reopen, using Lincoln High School as an interim site while renovations are done for the old building, which will be fully operational starting in 2012.
  • Mercer School. This building was at Fourth Avenue N. and Valley Street near the base of Queen Anne Hill. Opened in 1890, closed and demolished in 1948, the property is now the site of the Seattle Public Schools administration building.[40]
  • North Queen Anne School, opened 1914 as annex to Ross School, independent 1918, expanded 1922, closed 1981. Since then it has been leased to Northwest Center for the Retarded (now just "Northwest Center") for their Child Development Program.[41]
  • Olympic School, 1891-1909 grades 1–4 in the Judkins Park neighborhood as an annex to the Rainier School, then used for Special Education 1914–1932. Demolished 1937, site sold by 1940.[42]
  • Pacific School, 1896–1946, then as Pacific Prevocational Center (coeducational secondary school for mentally handicapped youngsters) to 1975. Demolished 1977, land is now part of Seattle University. Had Seattle's first fully equipped school gymnasiums (2 of them).[43]
  • Pinehurst School: opened 1950 as the K-3 Pinehurst Primary School in the Shoreline School District. Annexed 1953 and renamed Pinehurst Elementary School; physically expanded 1955–6 and became a K-6. Closed 1981. Site of Alternative School #1 since 1984.[44]
  • Pontiac School (1890–1926). Originally part of the Yesler School District; Yesler was more or less today's Laurelhurst. Annexed by Seattle 1911.[45]
  • Queen Anne School, later West Queen Anne School. This 1890 school (later expanded) between W. Galer (then Gaylor) and W. Lee Streets and between Fifth and Sixth Avenues W. was later known as the West Queen Anne School. The building survives as a condominium apartment building, and is on the National Register of Historic Places.[46]
  • Rainier School. This school at 23rd Avenue S. and S. King Street opened in 1891, briefly known as "Lincoln" in 1903, closed as elementary school in 1940, reopened as unit of Edison Technical School in 1943, and finally closed and was demolished in 1943.[5]
  • Pleasant Valley School. Opened 1912 as annex to Lawton. Became independent 1922. Closed 1926, superseded by the Magnolia School.[14]
  • Rainier View Elementary School. (1954[47]-2007). Merged into Emerson Elementary starting with 2007–08 school year due to decreasing enrollment in the district.[35]
  • Rainier Vista School. Built in 1943 with federal funds at the Rainier Vista housing project, which was originally built for Boeing workers during World War II. Leased by Seattle Schools from the outset, purchased 1947. Used as an annex to the Columbia School, it was initially a nursery school and K–1. Ages were gradually expanded, eventually a K–6. Closed 1971, used 1971–2000 for Head Start classes.[48]
  • Ravenna School. Two successive schools, mid-1890s–1909 and 1911–1981. The latter is now the Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center (and senior housing).[49][50]
  • Riverside School (1911–1926); one-room schoolhouse; superseded by the Youngstown/Cooper School; the building survives.[51]
  • Randell School (1890–1904), predecessor to Madrona School.[52]
  • Ross School (1883–1941) operated in two successive locations, both between Fremont and Ballard. The post 1903 location is the site of today's Ross Playfield.[53]
  • Salmon Bay School (unrelated to the current school of that name). Founded 1901 as part of the Ballard School District, annexed with Ballard in 1907. Closed as school 1932, used 1938 for WPA sewing classes. Demolished 1945, now site of Ballard Boys and Girls Club.[54]
  • Sand Point School (1958–1988). Part of North Seattle Community College since 1990.[45] On October 7, 2009 it was announced that Sand Point Elementary School will be reopening beginning with the 2010–2011 school year.
  • Seward School. In the Eastlake neighborhood. Opened 1895. There are three distinct buildings, all extant (though the original building has been moved), and with a rather complicated history of uses; as of 2007, TOPS @ Seward uses these buildings.[55]
  • South School / Main Street School. Original building opened as South School 1873, renamed Kindergarten School 1897–1902, then Main Street School (annex to the new South School 1902–1909, briefly known as Mann School in 1903), then used as a temporary relocation site or annex for various schools until 1921. Demolished 1922.[56]
  • South Park School. Opened 1902, annexed with South Park 1907. Annex to Concord School after 1914. Closed 1938. Now site of South Park Community Center.[57]
  • South Seattle School. Opened 1892 by School District 99 as a successor to Head of the Bay School. Annexed to Seattle 1905. Closed 1932. Site is now South Seattle Playground.[28]
  • Summit School (1905–1965). The building functioned 1965–1973 as an annex to Seattle Central Community College; then for three years it housed the alternative school that still bears its name, and offshoot of the NOVA program. In 1977 it was sold and converted to use as offices; the same year, it was listed on the NRHP. The building was sold again in 1980, and since that time has housed the Northwest School, a private preparatory school.[58]
  • University Heights School. Opened 1902; briefly known as Morse School in 1903; from 1974, Alternative Elementary School #2 used two-thirds of the building; exteriors declared city landmark 1977; closed 1989, with the alternative school moving to the Decatur School. Since 1990 it is the University Heights Community Center.[59]
  • Viewlands Elementary (1954[60]-2007). Merged into Broadview-Thomson Elementary starting with 2007–08 school year due to decreasing enrollment in the district.[35]
  • Warren Avenue School (1903–1959). Briefly known in 1903 as Edwards School. The school became a pioneer in programs for physically handicapped students, notably those with cerebral palsy, but also the hearing impaired, blind, etc. Closed to make way for the Century 21 Exposition: the site is now the KeyArena.[61]
  • Webster School. Opened 1903 as Bay View School by Ballard School District. Annexed with Ballard itself in 1907. Moved to new building January 1908 and renamed in honor of Daniel Webster in March. Closed 1979; briefly leased by a motion picture producer (during which time it was seriously damaged by a fire); now the site of the Nordic Heritage Museum,[62] which is seeking to move to a Market Street, Ballard site as of 2007.[63]
  • Wetmore School. Opened 1903 or earlier by the Columbia School District. Annexed with Columbia City in 1907. After 1910 it became the gymnasium of the York School (later renamed after John Muir, and still open as of 2007). It was used in that capacity until 1959, when the former Wetmore School took on the name "York School" and was used for manual training, before becoming a gym again 1973–1989. Demolished 1989.[64]
  • (Reverend George F.) Whitworth Elementary School. (1908[65]-2007). Merged into Dearborn Park Elementary starting with 2007–08 school year due to decreasing enrollment in the district.[35]
  • Yesler School (1892–1918). Originally part of the Yesler School District; as noted above, Yesler was more or less today's Laurelhurst. Annexed by Seattle 1911.[66]

Other properties previously included in district

  • Parental Home for Girls / Girls' Parental School / Martha Washington School. Two successive locations. The first (1914–1921), in the Ravenna-Bryant neighborhood, was later the similar but privately operated Ruth School for Girls and then the Medina Baby Home; sold 1945. The second was at Brighton Beach on Lake Washington, at the site of what was already a similar, privately run facility. From 1921 to 1957 it was part of Seattle Public Schools; renamed Martha Washington 1931; passed under state control in 1957, and was closed as a residential school in 1965. The building was later used by a series of alternative schools and a Montessori academy before being demolished in 1989. Its archway was relocated to Green Lake Park in June, 2009.[67][68]
  • Parental School / Parental Home for Boys / (Luther) Burbank School for Boys. Opened 1905 as Parental School; "for Boys" added 1914 when Parental Home for Girls was established; renamed after Luther Burbank 1931; passed under state control in 1957, and was closed as a residential school in 1965. Located on Mercer Island, outside of city limits. The location is now Luther Burbank Park; several buildings and other remnants survive.[69]
  • School for the Deaf. Founded at Longfellow School 1907(?)[70] and remained there until 1912. At Washington School 1912–1921.[71] Then at T.T. Minor School through 1939 when it was divided out to Summit, Longfellow again, and (John) Marshall[72] (then a junior high school; program there may have begun later, in 1942[73]). The program at Summit moved to University Heights in 1960.[58] Eventually, not treated as a separate "school". The current program for deaf middle school students is at Eckstein.[74]

Notes

  1. Denotes original date of establishment of the school, changes in name and/or location noted in corresponding footnote
  2. Denotes location of school by Seattle neighborhood, does not necessary correspond with attendance area
  3. Denotes original date of establishment of the school, changes in name and/or location noted in corresponding footnote
  4. Denotes location of school by Seattle neighborhood, does not necessary correspond with attendance area
  5. Denotes original date of establishment of the school, changes in name and/or location noted in corresponding footnote
  6. Denotes location of school by Seattle neighborhood, does not necessary correspond with attendance area
  7. Denotes original date of establishment of the school, changes in name and/or location noted in corresponding footnote
  8. Denotes location of school by Seattle neighborhood, does not necessary correspond with attendance area
  1. Opened as Ballard School in 1889. Joined Seattle schools in 1907.
  2. Original school opened 1908.
  3. Current building opened in 1930
  4. Oldest continuously operating elementary school in Seattle.
  5. Current building opened in 1970
  6. Named for Nathaniel Hawthorne
  7. Current building 1989
  8. Current building opened in 1989
  9. Named after Captain George W. Kimball.
  10. 1893 as part of West Seattle School District, renamed 1918.
  11. Named similarly to Fort Lawton, after Henry Ware Lawton.
  12. Traces back to Salmon Bay School in 1895, rebuilt as Lawton 1913.
  13. Original building demolished in 1988.
  14. Original building demolished in 1959.
  15. Current building opened in 1932.
  16. Current building opened in 1971.
  17. Opened as Colman School in 1909. Current building opened in 1991. Renamed Thurgood Marshall in 1996.
  18. Opened as Brighton School in 1904. Current building opened in 1949. Renamed Martin Luther King Jr. in 2010.
  19. Closed in 1981. Reopened in 2012
  20. Opened at current location in 1913
  21. 1862 is date of establishment of Van Asselt Elementary School. Joined Seattle schools in 1907. Van Asselt moved to current location in 2009, and was renamed Rising Star Elementary School in 2019.
  22. Current building opened in 2016. Originally named Decatur Elementary, renamed in 2008.
  23. Current building opened in 1991.
  24. Current building opened in 1999.
  25. As South Van Asselt school, renamed for Wing Luke in 1969.
  26. Refounded as an "international" middle school in 2011.
  27. Opened as Ballard School in 1889. Joined Seattle schools in 1907.
  28. In old South Shore building.

References

  1. Seattle Public Schools, SPS website FAQ list, Seattle Public Schools, date unknown. Accessed online 8 July 2008.
  2. 1 2 "Seattle Public Schools - Building for Learning". Archived from the original on April 15, 2013. Retrieved April 16, 2013.
  3. Washington State Office of the Superintendent for Public Instruction, Total Enrollment Gender and Ethnicity by school, Washington State OSPI, January 25, 2008. Accessed online 2008-06-02.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "P223 Enrollment Reporting" (PDF). Seattle Public Schools. Retrieved May 3, 2023.
  5. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): Rainier; archived 3 June 2009.
  6. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Addams; archived 3 June 2009.
  7. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Boren; archived 3 June 2009.
  8. (Thompson & Marr 2002): South Shore; archived 3 June 2009.
  9. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Broadview-Thomson Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine; archived 3 June 2009.
  10. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Wilson; archived 3 June 2009.
  11. Louis Fiset, Seattle Neighborhoods: Phinney Thumbnail History, HistoryLink, August 29, 2001. Accessed online 9 December 2007.
  12. David Wilma, Seattle Neighborhoods: Beacon Hill Thumbnail History, HistoryLink, February 21, 2001. Accessed online 9 December 2007.
  13. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Denny; archived 3 June 2009.
  14. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): Briarcliff; archived 3 June 2009.
  15. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Graham Hill; archived 3 June 2009.
  16. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Broadview; archived 3 June 2009.
  17. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Cascade; archived 3 June 2009.
  18. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Crown Hill; archived 3 June 2009.
  19. Louis Fiset, Seattle Neighborhoods: Crown Hill Thumbnail History, HistoryLink, July 20, 2001. Accessed 9 December 2007.
  20. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Holgate; archived 3 June 2009.
  21. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Holgate Aircraft; archived 3 June 2009.
  22. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Fairview; archived 3 June 2009.
  23. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Fauntleroy; archived 3 June 2009.
  24. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Georgetown; archived 3 June 2009.
  25. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Goodhue; archived 3 June 2009.
  26. Exhibit item, part of Parents Organize, Disability Rights Exhibit, Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Accessed online 20 December 2007.
  27. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Haller Lake; archived 3 June 2009.
  28. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): South Seattle; archived 3 June 2009.
  29. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Hughes; archived 3 June 2009.
  30. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Interbay; archived 3 June 2009.
  31. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Interlake; archived 3 June 2009.
  32. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Irving; archived 3 June 2009.
  33. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Jefferson; archived 3 June 2009.
  34. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): King; archived 3 June 2009.
  35. 1 2 3 4 School Board OKs closure plan, Seattle Post-Intelligencer (July 26, 2006).
  36. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Lake City; archived 3 June 2009.
  37. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Maple Leaf; archived 3 June 2009.
  38. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Mann; archived 3 June 2009.
  39. (Thompson & Marr 2002): McDonald; archived 3 June 2009.
  40. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Mercer; archived 3 June 2009.
  41. (Thompson & Marr 2002): North Queen Anne; archived 3 June 2009.
  42. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Olympic; archived 3 June 2009.
  43. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Pacific; archived 3 June 2009.
  44. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Pinehurst; archived 3 June 2009.
  45. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): Sand Point; archived 3 June 2009.
  46. (Thompson & Marr 2002): West Queen Anne; archived 3 June 2009.
  47. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Rainier View; archived 3 June 2009.
  48. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Columbia Annex; archived 3 June 2009.
  49. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Ravenna; archived 3 June 2009.
  50. Ravenna-Eckstein Community Center, Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation. Accessed 20 December 2007.
  51. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Cooper; archived 3 June 2009.
  52. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Madrona; archived 3 June 2009.
  53. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Ross; archived 3 June 2009.
  54. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Salmon Bay; archived 3 June 2009.
  55. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Seward; archived 3 June 2009.
  56. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Gatzert; archived 3 June 2009. An annex at 307 Sixth Avenue survives and is considered a city landmark.
  57. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Concord; archived 3 June 2009.
  58. 1 2 (Thompson & Marr 2002): Summit; archived 3 June 2009.
  59. (Thompson & Marr 2002): University Heights; archived 3 June 2009.
  60. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Viewlands; archived 3 June 2009.
  61. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Warren Avenue; archived 3 June 2009.
  62. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Webster; archived 3 June 2009.
  63. Make a Donation, Nordic Heritage Museum. Accessed 10 December 2007.
  64. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Muir; archived 3 June 2009.
  65. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Whitworth; archived 3 June 2009.
  66. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Bryant; archived 3 June 2009.
  67. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Martha Washington; archived 3 June 2009.
  68. David Wilma, Martha Washington School, HistoryLink, March 20, 2001. Accessed online 9 December 2007.
  69. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Burbank; archived 3 June 2009.
  70. The Association Review, American Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf, volume 9 (1907), p. 503.
  71. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Washington; archived 3 June 2009.
  72. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Minor; archived 3 June 2009.
  73. (Thompson & Marr 2002): John Marshall; archived 3 June 2009.
  74. (Thompson & Marr 2002): Eckstein; archived 3 June 2009.

Sources

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