Norman Thomas High School Explained

Norman Thomas High School
Streetaddress:111 East 33rd Street
City:New York
State:NY
County:(New York County)
Zipcode:10016
Country:United States
Coordinates:40.7465°N -73.9807°W
Schooltype:High school
Fundingtype:Government funding
Status:Closed
Principal:Philip Martin, Jr.[1]
Faculty:114.19
Grades:9 to 12
Enrollment:2,147
Enrollment As Of:2009-2010 school year
Grade9:871
Grade10:619
Grade11:302
Grade12:131
Other Grade Enrollment:224
Other Grade Label:Ungraded
Ratio:18.80
Campus Type:Urban
School Colors:Maroon and Black
Mascot:Tigers
Website:www.normanthomas.info/

The Norman Thomas High School for Business and Commercial Education was a public high school (closed in June 2014) in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City under the New York City Department of Education. Formerly known as Central Commercial High School (CCHS), and before that, the Central School of Business and Arts, its former location was on 42nd Street in a structure constructed with a 20-story office building in the air rights above it. It was renamed after Presbyterian minister and Socialist activist Norman Thomas and moved to occupy the first nine floors of 3 Park Avenue, a 42-story skyscraper on East 33rd Street at Park Avenue in 1975.

The high school was originally designed to train students for secretarial and commercial occupations such as accounting, bookkeeping, merchandising and salesmanship, clerical skills, stenography and typing. As of 1940, every senior at Central Commercial High School was required to complete four weeks of work in an office during the last semester.[2] In later years, this expanded to include such topics as data processing[3] and physical distribution.[4]

Notable alumni

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Welcome - Norman Thomas High School - M620 - New York City Department of Education . The New York City Department Of Education . July 12, 2012.
  2. School and college placement. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Association of School and College Placement, 1940; Vol. 1, p. 64.
  3. Johnson, Bob . Data Processing Finding Place in NYC Schools . . July 6, 1981 . 18 . July 12, 2024 . Google Books.
  4. Handling & Shipping Management Cleveland: Penton/IPC, 1983. Volume 24, pp. 35, 89.
  5. Book: Clemente, John. Girl Groups: Fabulous Females Who Rocked the World. 2013-06-24. Bloomington, Indiana. Author House. 9781477281284. 137. en. 2018-04-29. Google Books.
  6. News: Barbara Alston, Who Sang With the Crystals, Dies at 74. Slotnik. Daniel E.. 2018-03-06. The New York Times. 2018-04-29. en-US. 0362-4331.
  7. Book: Loza, Steven Joseph . Tito Puente and the Making of Latin Music . Champaign, Illinois . University of Illinois Press . 1999 . 1 . 9780252067785.