Finney High School Explained
Jared W. Finney High School was a public comprehensive high school in northeastern Detroit, Michigan, United States. Located at 17200 Southampton, it was a part of Detroit Public Schools, and was in proximity to the Grosse Pointes.[1]
History
The school first opened as an elementary school in 1928.[2] [3] [4] [5] It became a high school in 1962.[6] [7]
Finney received a $2.5 million bond investment prior to its closure in 2009.[2] The original plan was to rebuild the school in a new $75 million campus on the same site shared with McNair Pre-K-8, but those plans changed.[8] In 2012, Finney and Crockett High School merged into East English Village Preparatory Academy,[2] which was built on the former site of Finney.[1]
The school was named after Detroiter Jared Warner Finney, a United States Commissioner and U.S. Attorney, in honor of his wide-ranging contributions to the City of Detroit. He was one of two sole members of the first graduating class of Detroit High School in 1861. Jared's father, Seymour Finney, was a prominent conductor on Detroit's underground railroad and owned "Finney's Barn," near Griswold and State streets, where the family hid former slaves and helped ferry them to freedom in Canada.[9]
Notable alumni
External links
Notes and References
- Foster, Terry. "Detroit King pulls out another tough one over East English Village " (archive). Detroit News. September 7, 2013. Retrieved on August 8, 2015.
- "Some DPS buildings no longer in use after major investments" (archive). Detroit Free Press. October 7, 2013. Retrieved on August 8, 2015.
- News: Detroit Schools 1842-2015 - Public. Google Docs. 2017-07-19. en.
- News: Bankrupt and Shrinking, Detroit Selling 79 Abandoned Schools. Curbed Detroit. 2017-07-19.
- Web site: hotfudgedetroit.com • View topic - Scrappers in Action. hotfudgedetroit.com. en-gb. 2017-07-19.
- News: Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan on February 1, 1975 · Page 10. Newspapers.com. 2017-07-19. en.
- Web site: Detroit Finney Highlanders All-time Michigan high school football/basketball conference records. michigan-football.com. 2017-07-19.
- Schultz, Marisa. "DPS parents feeling betrayed " (archive). The Detroit News. March 20, 2010. Retrieved on August 8, 2015.
- Book: Successful Men of Michigan: A Compilation of Useful Biographical Sketches of Prominent Men. 1914. SI. U. Collins. en.
- Web site: Calandrino chosen as Utica's next mayor . Mitch Hotts . November 3, 2020.
- Web site: Tony F. Elliott. Pro-Football-Reference.com. 2011-07-12.
- Web site: 68 Cairngorm "Maria Louise Ewing" (Finney Jr. Sr. High School, Detroit). . 1968 . 30. Ancestry.com . Generations Network. subscription. 25 August 2020 .