Lafayette High School (Buffalo)
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Lafayette High School
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Lafayette High School, Buffalo NY, April 2011
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| Location: | 370 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, New York |
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| Coordinates: | 42°55′15″N 78°53′5″W / 42.92083°N 78.88472°WCoordinates: 42°55′15″N 78°53′5″W / 42.92083°N 78.88472°W |
| Built: | 1901 |
| Architect: | Esenwein & Johnson |
| Architectural style: | Beaux Arts |
| Governing body: | Local |
| NRHP Reference#: |
80002608 [1] |
| Added to NRHP: | December 3, 1980 |
| LaFayette High School Loyalty, Honor, Service |
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| Information | |
| School type | Public, Coeducational High School |
| School board | Buffalo Board of Education |
| School district | Buffalo Public Schools |
| Oversight | New York State Education Department |
| Superintendent | Amber M. Dixon (interim) |
| School number | 204 |
| Principal | Naomi R. Cerre (acting) |
| Assistant principals | Craig Brodnicki Julie Horn Yuldonna Middleton |
| Grades | 7-12 |
| Color(s) | Violet and White |
| Mascot | Violets |
| Website | Lafayette High School |
Lafayette High School is the oldest public school in Buffalo that remains in its original building; a stone, brick and terra-cotta structure in the French Renaissance Revival style, by architects August Esenwein and James A. Johnson. Although classes began off-site during construction of the school, the building was completed, and graduated its first class, in 1903. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.[1]
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[edit] History
LaFayette High School was the third high school built in Buffalo, New York. It has fallen into recent struggles with academics and has been placed on New York State's Watch List of Persistently Underperforming Schools. After the 2010-2011 school year, the school closed and re-opened as a multicultural school with a new administration. The school also began housing seventh and eighth graders from nearby International School 45.
[edit] Former principals
Previous assignment and reason for departure denoted in parentheses
- Mr. Arthur Detmers–1903-1906 (unknown, resigned)
- Mr. Calvert King Mellen–1906-1934 (unknown, retired)
- Mr. Frank Gott–1934-1955 (Vice Principal - Lafayette High School, retired)
- Mr. Abraham Axelrod–1955-1958 (unknown, passed away)
- Mr. Robert C. McGowan–1958-1968 (Assistant Principal - East High School, retired)
- Mr. Gerald S. Hare–1968-1972 (Assistant Principal - East High School, transferred to Buffalo Public Schools District Offices)
- Mr. Frederick D. Ganter–1972-1997 (Assistant Principal - East High School, retired[2])
- Ms. Sharon A. Lanza–1997-2004 (Assistant Principal - Lafayette High School, retired)
- Dr. Jacquelyn M. Baldwin–2004-2008 (Assistant Principal - City Honors School,[3] transferred to Office Of School Performance[4])
- Dr. Phyllis F. Morrell–2008-2011 (Principal on Assignment - McKinley Vocational High School,[4] named Principal of Lydia T. Wright School of Excellence[5])
[edit] Selected former assistant principals
Previous assignment and reason for departure denoted in parentheses
- Mr. Charles E. Rhodes–1918-1925 (English Teacher - Lafayette High School, named Principal of Bennett High School)
- Mr. Frank Gott–1925-1934 (unknown, named Principal of Lafayette High School)
- Mr. Irvin H. Himmele–1934-1941 (unknown, placed on military leave)
- Mr. Carl S. Walz–1941-1948 (unknown, named Assistant Principal of East High School)
- Mr. Frank J. Kelly–1948-1957 (unknown, named Principal of Kensington High School)
- Mr. Salvatore J. Scamacca–1969-1990 (Instrumental music instructor - Lafayette High School, retired)
- Ms. Mary Elizabeth Dougherty (Guidance Counselor - Lafayette High School, named Director of Business Education for Buffalo Public Schools)
- Mr. Thomas P. Kopera–?-1990 (Teacher - Buffalo Public Schools, named Principal of Burgard Vocational High School)
- Mr. Elzie B. Fisher–1990-1995 (Assistant Principal - Kensington High School, named Principal of Buffalo Alternative High School)
- Ms. Patricia C. Kormash–?-1994 (French teacher - Lafayette High School, named Assistant Principal of North Tonawanda High School)
- Ms. Sharon A. Lanza–1994-1997 (Assistant Principal - Grover Cleveland High School, named Principal of Lafayette High School)
- Mr. Thomas N. Kalenik–1995-2004 (unknown, retired)
- Ms. Lisa K. Robinson–1997-2006 (Computer teacher - Hutchinson Central Technical High School, named Assistant Principal of Opportunity Center at 331[6])
- Mr. Gregory K. Pigeon–2004-2005 (Business Teacher - Riverside Institute of Technology,[3] named Assistant Principal of Erie 1 BOCES - Harkness Center)
- Mr. Philip M. Martin–2005-2006 (Assistant Principal - Hutchinson Central Technical School,[7] resigned[8])
- Mrs. Denise E. Clarke–2006-2009 (Acting Assistant Principal - City Honors School,[6] named Assistant Principal Of Riverside Institute of Technology[9])
- Mr. Gregory T. Mott–2006 (Assistant Principal - Opportunity School at 331,[6] named Principal of Academy School 131 @ 44[10])
- Mr. John E. Evert–2006-2008 (Social Studies teacher - Burgard Vocational High School,[11] named Vice Principal of Lewiston-Porter High School)
[edit] Selected former administrators
| Year | Superintendent | Principal | Asst. Principal | Asst. Principal | Asst. Principal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1903-1904 | Art Detmers | ||||
| 1904-1905 | Art Detmers | ||||
| 1905-1906 | Art Detmers | ||||
| 1906-1907 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1907-1908 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1908-1909 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1909-1910 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1910-1911 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1911-1912 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1912-1913 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1913-1914 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1914-1915 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1915-1916 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1916-1917 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1917-1918 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1918-1919 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1919-1920 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1920-1921 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1921-1922 | Cap Mellen | Charlie Rhodes | |||
| 1922-1923 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1923-1924 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1924-1925 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1925-1926 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1926-1927 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1927-1928 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1928-1929 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1929-1930 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1930-1931 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1931-1932 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1932-1933 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1933-1934 | Cap Mellen | ||||
| 1934-1935 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1935-1936 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1936-1937 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1937-1938 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1938-1939 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1939-1940 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1940-1941 | Frank Gott | Irvin Himmele | |||
| 1941-1942 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1942-1943 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1943-1944 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1944-1945 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1945-1946 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1946-1947 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1947-1948 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1948-1949 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1949-1950 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1950-1951 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1951-1952 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1952-1953 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1953-1954 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1954-1955 | Frank Gott | ||||
| 1955-1956 | Abe Axelrod | ||||
| 1956-1957 | Abe Axelrod | ||||
| 1957-1958 | Abe Axelrod | ||||
| 1958-1959 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1959-1960 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1960-1961 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1961-1962 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1962-1963 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1963-1964 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1964-1965 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1965-1966 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1966-1967 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1967-1968 | Rob McGowan | ||||
| 1968-1969 | Gerald Hare | ||||
| 1969-1970 | Gerald Hare | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1970-1971 | Gerald Hare | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1971-1972 | Gerald Hare | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1972-1973 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1973-1974 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1974-1975 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1965-1976 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1976-1977 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1977-1978 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1978-1979 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1979-1980 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1980-1981 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1981-1982 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1982-1983 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1983-1984 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1984-1985 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1985-1986 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1986-1987 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1987-1988 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1988-1989 | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | |||
| 1989-1990 | Eugene Reville | Rick Ganter | Sal Scamacca | Tom Kopera | |
| 1990-1991 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Elzie Fisher | ||
| 1991-1992 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Elzie Fisher | ||
| 1992-1993 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Elzie Fisher | ||
| 1993-1994 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Elzie Fisher | Sharon Lanza | |
| 1994-1995 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Elzie Fisher | Sharon Lanza | |
| 1995-1996 | Albert Thompson | Rick Ganter | Tom Kanelik | Sharon Lanza | |
| 1996-1997 | Jim Harris | Rick Ganter | Tom Kanelik | Sharon Lanza | |
| 1997-1998 | Jim Harris | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 1998-1999 | Jim Harris | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 1999-2000 | Marion Canedo | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2000-2001 | Marion Canedo | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2001-2002 | Marion Canedo | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2002-2003 | Marion Canedo | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2003-2004 | Marion Canedo | Sharon Lanza | Tom Kanelik | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2004-2005 | Yvonne Hargrave | Jackie Baldwin | Greg Pigeon | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2005-2006 | James Williams | Jackie Baldwin | Philip Martin | Lisa Robinson | |
| 2006-2007 | James Williams | Jackie Baldwin | Denise Clarke | Mott/Every | |
| 2007-2008 | James Williams | Jackie Baldwin | Denise Clarke | John Every | |
| 2008-2009 | James Williams | Fatima Morrell | Denise Clarke | Craig Brodnicki | |
| 2009-2010 | James Williams | Fatima Morrell | Julie Horn | Craig Brodnicki | |
| 2010-2011 | James Williams | Fatima Morrell | Julie Horn | Craig Brodnicki | |
| 2011-2012 | Amber Dixon* | Naomi Cerre | Julie Horn | Craig Brodnicki | Yulanda Middleton |
[edit] Notable alumni
| This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2009) |
- Barney Lepper (class of 1915), founder of the Buffalo All-Stars, which eventually became the city's first NFL team
- Fran Striker (class of 1922), author, creator of the radio serial The Lone Ranger.
- Gary Mallaber (class of (N/A)), Multiple platinum selling drummer and producer involved with acts such as The Steve Miller Band, Van Morrison and Eddie Money.
- Bruce Shanks (class of 1927), Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist.
- Gordon Bunshaft (class of 1928), noted twentieth-century architect.
- Robert J. Donovan (class of 1932), Washington Bureau Chief, New York Herald Tribune and Los Angeles Times. President, White House Correspondents' Association. Author of 12 books including PT-109. Only journalist to ever address a Joint Session of Congress.
- Frank Kelly Freas (class of 1938), famed science-fiction cover artist.
- Jeremiah Goodman (class of 1939), artist, known simply as "Jeremiah", painter of interior still lifes of famous residences.
- The Modernaires (Hal Dickinson, Chuck Goldstein, and Bill Conway, late 1930s), the popular harmony group renowned for its performances on record and motion pictures with the Glenn Miller Orchestra.
- Douglas L. Turner (class of 1949),Executive Editor, Buffalo Courier-Express, Washington Bureau Chief and columnist for the Buffalo News.
- Tedd Lewin (class of 1953), artist, author and illustrator of children's books.
- Angelo Coniglio (class of 1954), first Civil Engineering graduate of the University at Buffalo, engineer, professor of engineering, author, archivist of the American Football League, genealogical author.
- Elizabeth L. Dribben (class of 1954), first female news anchor on Buffalo television, copy writer at CBS News for Dan Rather, Walter Cronkite, and Charles Kuralt. Member of the Buffalo Broadcasting Hall of Fame.
- Lawson, Edward (class of 1964), Edward won a landmark Supreme Court victory over racism and arbitrary stop and seizure practices by California police by defending himself before the Supreme Court of the US. [Lawson v. Kolender, 658 F.2d 1362 (9th Cir. 1981) October 15, 1981 et seq.]. Few Lafayette graduates have ever shown such personal triumph over injustice.
Shanks (1927) and Lewin (1953), and all the art students in between were influenced by the remarkable Miss Elizabeth Weiffenbach, who taught art at the school for over forty years. These included Jack Smart (class of 1922), an artist who also played The Fat Man on 1940's radio; and Irving Jeremiah Goodman (class of 1939), a contemporary artist specializing in room still lifes. Turner rowed for the U.S. in the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia, was executive editor of The Buffalo Courier-Express, and is a member of the exclusive Gridiron Club in Washington, D.C.
The public school is supported by the private Lafayette High School Alumni Association, remarkable in its size and ability to sponsor school causes. In 1999, the association restored the building's landmark lantern or "cupola", which had deteriorated and been demolished for safety reasons in the 1970s. In May 2003, the association sponsored and ran a 100th Anniversary Celebration, attended by over 1,700 alumni and their guests, raising $30,000 for the school. The funds will establish the Ramsi P. Tick media room in memory of entrepreneur Tick, an LHS alumnus and philanthropist. The association also awards several annual grants and scholarships for worthy causes and students.
As their logos, the school and the Association use the LHS Triangle (Lafayette High School; Loyalty, Honor, Service) , and the Lafayette Angel.
[edit] Gallery
[edit] References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2008-04-15. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html.
- ^ Heaney, J. (1997, June 23). Retirements, transfers may mean new principals for 10 city - schools. The Buffalo News, p. B4.
- ^ a b Buffalo Public Schools (2004, June 9). Meeting of the Board of Education: Principal Transfers.
- ^ a b Buffalo Public Schools (2008, August 13). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2011, September 14). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
- ^ a b c Buffalo Public Schools (2006, February 22). Meeting of the Board of Education: Elementary Principal Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2005, September 7). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2006, January 11). Meeting of the Board of Education: Elementary Principal Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2009, July 8). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2006, October 23). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
- ^ Buffalo Public Schools (2006, December 6). Meeting of the Board of Education: Administrative Appointments.
[edit] External links
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