Glen Cove City School District Explained

Glen Cove City School District is a public school district that serves Glen Cove, New York. It currently consists of Glen Cove High School, Robert M. Finley Middle School, and four elementary schools. Two former elementary school buildings are currently in use as private schools.

History

Early history

The first schoolhouse in Glen Cove was on School Street. It was replaced in 1821 with a larger schoolhouse on the corner of School Street and Highland Road. In 1857, the district was legally formed as "School District No. 5 of the Town of Oyster Bay", and the schoolhouse was replaced on the same site with an even larger building.[1]

In 1893, the school moved to a new campus on the corner of Forest Avenue and Dosoris Lane. The land was donated by Charles Pratt and reflected his educational philosophy, offering both academic and craftsmanship courses. The school was sometimes referred to as the Union School.[2] A new four-story primary school building was constructed adjoining the main school in 1906. The district was first licensed by the state to award high school diplomas in 1908.[3] Another new building was constructed in 1911, which is now the west wing of Finley Middle School. The primary school burned down in 1926,[4] and was replaced the following year by Deasy School on the same site.

Expansion

The 1893 building was replaced in 1939 by a new building constructed by the Public Works Administration, which originally served as the junior and senior high school, and is currently Robert M. Finley Middle School.[5] The district also constructed elementary schools in other locations: South School and Coles School in 1930, Landing School in 1932; East School (later renamed Margaret A. Connolly School) in 1955; and Gribbin School in 1966. The current Glen Cove High School was constructed on a 20-acre plot in 1962.

In 1961, the NAACP named Glen Cove as one of seven school districts in Nassau County having de facto segregated schools, as South School's students were predominantly non-white due to its location in a largely non-white neighborhood. This led to an appeal to the State Commissioner of Education regarding the Glen Cove and Malverne districts, resulting in a 1963 ruling that the latter must end racial imbalance that was eventually upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. This gave impetus to Glen Cove to do the same, and in 1965, its school board announced a plan to eliminate the racial imbalance by closing South School and redistributing its students to the other elementary schools, which was implemented the following year. This was made possible by the opening of the Gribbin School and a twelve-room addition to the middle school. The South School building remained in use for educational special services and kindergarten.[6]

The Finley School had a new arts and media center and gymnasium constructed behind the main building in 1975, and its west wing was renovated in 1989.[7]

The former Coles School closed in 1992, and the City of Glen Cove bought the building in 2002 and leased it to the Solomon Schechter School until 2011. Tiegerman Schools and Community Services acquired the former South School in 1999 and the former Coles School in 2017 for use as elementary and middle schools for students with speech and learning disorders or autism.[8]

Schools

Current

Former

Notes and References

  1. Book: Harrison, Joan. Glen Cove Revisited. 2010. Arcadia Publishing. 978-0-7385-7295-6. 99. en.
  2. Web site: Glen Cove, New York: Union School, undated.. 2021-11-14. New York Heritage Digital Collections. en.
  3. Web site: About Our High School. 2021-05-31. Glen Cove City Schools.
  4. News: 1926-12-10. Glen Cove school burns to ground. 4. Brooklyn Daily Times. 2021-05-30.
  5. Book: Stanley-Brown. Rudolph. Public buildings: a survey of architecture of projects constructed by federal and other governmental bodies between the years 1933 and 1939 with the assistance of the Public Works Administration. Short. Charles Wilkins. 1939. U.S. Government Printing Office. 200.
  6. Warshauer. Mary Ellen. February 1968. Glen Cove, New York / The evolution of a school desegregation plan. The Urban Review. en. 2. 4. 25–29. 10.1007/BF02311129. 144070263. 0042-0972.
  7. Web site: About Robert M. Finley Middle School. 2021-05-31. Glen Cove City Schools.
  8. Web site: Reyes. Ronny. 2019-10-03. Tiegerman Middle School opens in Glen Cove. 2021-08-23. Long Island Herald. en.