Southdown High School
Appearance
Southdown High School was a segregated school for black people in Houma, Louisiana. It was a part of Terrebonne Parish School District and was the only public black school in the parish.[1]
It opened in 1946 as Houma Colored High School. In 1949 it became Southtown High School; in 1952 grades 6-12 began classes and in 1953 the first class graduated. Its name changed to Southdown High School when it moved into its final location, a St. Charles Street building. Its books originated from the then-white Terrebonne High School and South Terrebonne High School. Eventually it became a grade 9-12 school. In 1969 the school closed due to racial integration, and students moved to South Terrebonne High School and Terrebonne High School.[1]
References
- ^ a b Dishman, Jaime Lugibihl (2005-06-26). "Students of former Southdown High School gather for remembrance". Houma Today. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
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Categories:
- Schools in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana
- Public high schools in Louisiana
- Public middle schools in Louisiana
- Public elementary schools in Louisiana
- 1946 establishments in Louisiana
- Educational institutions established in 1946
- 1969 disestablishments in Louisiana
- Educational institutions disestablished in 1969
- Historically segregated African-American schools in the United States
- Louisiana school stubs