Alexander Graham Bell School (Chicago) Explained

Bell School
Established:1917
Type:Public Elementary
Principal:Kathleen Miller [1]
Head Name:Second Master
Head Name2:Assistant Headmaster
Faculty:50+
Enrollment:960
Grades:K-8
City:3730 North Oakley Avenue
Chicago
State:Illinois
Country:United States
Coordinates:41.9494°N -87.6867°W
District:299
Campus:City
Colors:Red, White and Black
Mascot:Blaze
Free Label:Emblem
Website:http://bell.cps.edu/

Alexander Graham Bell School, also known as Bell School[2] is a public school located in the North Center neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois, United States; it is a part of the Chicago Public Schools. It offers grades kindergarten through grade eight. It also has a deaf department for students in preschool through grade eight and additionally a Regional Gifted Center (Options) for students in grades kindergarten through eight.

The elementary school was founded in 1917 with 24 classrooms for hearing students and 15 classrooms for deaf students, after the Chicago School Board allocated US$285,000 for it in 1915 (approximately $ in current dollars).[3] [4]

The school, one of the largest built in the Chicago Public School system at the time, was dedicated on April 1, 1918, by its name source Alexander Graham Bell, advocate of education for deaf students.[5]

Sports

Bell School offers a variety of sports, including basketball, cross country, flag football, soccer, softball, track and field and volleyball.

Special events

Since 2003, Martyrs', a music venue on Lincoln Avenue, has hosted "Bands for Bell" where Bell parent bands play as a fundraiser for Bell.

See also

Notes and References

  1. A.G. Bell School. A.G. Bell School -Administrators, A.G. Bell School website, retrieved May 9, 2011.
  2. Web site: About us. Alexander Graham Bell Elementary School. 15 December 2016. Bell School values the professionalism .... https://web.archive.org/web/20161209232139/http://www.agbellschool.com/SitePages/Home.aspx?p=35&pm=ABOUT%20BELL&m=About&l=. 9 December 2016. dead.
  3. Chicago Tribune. School Board Decides To Hold All Vacant Land, Chicago Tribune, October 1, 1915, pg.11 (subscription).
  4. http://www.cpsalumni.org/school/bell%2C-alexander-g.-bell-elementary-school Bell, Alexander G., Elementary School
  5. Electrical Review. Electrical Review -Volume 72, International Trade Press, 1918, pg.704.