Kent City School District Explained

Kent City School District
Type:Public
Established:1860
Grades:Pre-K through 12
Superintendent:Tom Larkin
Teachers:189
Staff:273
Students:3,273 (2021–22)
Address:321 North DePeyster Street
City:Kent
State:Ohio
Country:United States
Zipcode:44240

The Kent City School District is a public school district based in Kent, Ohio, United States. It serves approximately 3,100 students living in Kent, Franklin Township, Brady Lake, and Sugar Bush Knolls, as well as a small portion of southern Streetsboro.[1] The district has seven schools including four elementary schools housing kindergarten through fifth grade with preschool housed at one elementary school; Stanton Middle School for grades 6–8; and Theodore Roosevelt High School, which houses grades 9–12. The superintendent is Tom Larkin, who began his tenure August 1, 2023. Larkin previously served as assistant superintendent and has been with the district since 1996.[2]

History

The district was formed around 1860[3] by merging several smaller one-room school house districts into one centralized district for the village. As Kent was still known as Franklin Mills, the district was originally known as the "Franklin Union School District".[4] The district would continue to be known as a "Franklin Union" district even after residents voted to change the name of the village from Franklin Mills to Kent in 1864. During the 1860s, the district began to divide the students in the school houses by grade level. As a result of the curriculum and management changes, the district elected to close the schoolhouses and erect a centralized building for all grades. Although initially planned for 1868, construction delays prevented the building from opening until March 1869. During the school year leading up to the opening of the new building, which would initially be known as the "Union School" and later as "Central School," students in the high school grades were housed at the Franklin Township Hall[5] in Kent while all other grades remained at their respective school house. The building would serve as the home of all students until growth in the community necessitated the construction of two additional elementary schools: South School in 1880 and DePeyster School in 1888.[3] Even with the new schools, the original Union/Central building would be the home of Kent High School until 1922.[3]

As Kent continued to grow throughout the twentieth century, new schools and changes became necessary. A new high school was built in 1922 and was named in honor of Theodore Roosevelt. The original Union School continued to be used as an elementary school known as Central School until 1953 when a new Central Elementary School was constructed on its predecessor's front yard. Following the completion of the new school, the Union School building was torn down. Additional elementary schools followed first with the construction of Longcoy Elementary School on the city's west side. By 1958 the high school had outgrown its facility, so a new high school building was built on the north side of the city. It retained the name of Theodore Roosevelt and the former high school building was rechristened as Davey Junior High School in the fall of 1959 when the new high school opened. 1959 also saw the merging of the Franklin Local School District and the Brady Lake School District into the Kent City Schools,[6] which added two more elementary schools: Franklin Elementary and Emma Williard (Brady Lake) Elementary. The 1960s saw the last elementary schools built in Kent with the opening of Holden Elementary in 1965 on the city's south side and Walls Elementary on the east side in 1966.[7] Most of South School was razed in 1966 following the completion of Holden except for the building's gym which was leased to the Kent Parks and Recreation Department and used as the Kent Recreation Center. Enrollment growth through the 1960s and into the 1970s resulted in additions at Walls School, Davey Junior High School, and Roosevelt High School. Also in 1970, the district entered into a cooperative agreement with the Stow-Munroe Falls, Cuyahoga Falls, Woodridge, Tallmadge, and Hudson school districts to provide vocational education. This compact, known as the Six District Compact, was the first of its kind in the state of Ohio.[8] In 1978, ninth graders were moved from Davey to Roosevelt, Emma Williard School was closed, and the school board moved into offices in the renovated DePeyster School building.[9]

Facilities

Administrative
FacilityLocationHeadPhoto
District offices321 N. DePeyster St.
41.1567°N -81.3558°W
Tom Larkin, Superintendent
Transportation Center1633 St. Clair Ave.
41.1389°N -81.3644°W
Richard Lewis[10]
Christenson Operations Center1205 Brady Lake Rd.
41.1642°N -81.3383°W
Robert Munroe
Elementary schools
SchoolGradesLocationPrincipalFaculty*Enrollment*Photo
Davey Elementary SchoolPK–5196 N. Prospect St.
41.1575°N -81.3669°W
Abbey Bolton[11] 26[12] 450
Holden Elementary SchoolK–5132 W. School St.
41.1425°N -81.3594°W
Todd Poole[13] 14254
Longcoy Elementary SchoolK–51069 Elno Ave.
41.1458°N -81.3822°W
Janice Swan[14] 16276
Walls Elementary SchoolK–5900 Doramor St.
41.1581°N -81.3453°W
Heidi Singer[15] 21367
Middle school
Stanton Middle School6–81175 Hudson Rd.
41.1689°N -81.3631°W
Kathy Scott[16] 47659
High school
Theodore Roosevelt High School9–121400 N. Mantua St.
41.1689°N -81.3561°W
Dennis Love[17] 801,267
Former schools
SchoolGradesLocationBuilding statusYears operatedNotesPhoto
Franklin Elementary School K–5 6662 SR 43
41.1714°N -81.3522°W
Sold to Davey Tree in 2021[18] 1922–2014 Served as Franklin Township School, 1922–1959
Central School 200 N. Mantua St.
41.1556°N -81.3622°W
Leased to the LEAP program[19] 1953–2014 Housed Central Elementary School, 1953–2000
Annex of Roosevelt High School, 2000–2014
Emma Williard School1–8; K–61945 Brady Lake Rd.
41.169°N -81.324°W
Sold to private developer; addition demolished, original building renovated into condos1923–1978Merged into Kent Schools 1959
Union School/Central School1–12; 1–8200 N. Mantua St.
41.156°N -81.3623°W
Demolished 19531869–1952Housed all grades, 1869–1922
Replaced by new Central School, 1952
South SchoolK–61115 Franklin Ave.
41.1433°N -81.3601°W
Demolished 19661880–1966Replaced by Holden Elementary School

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Property tax rates for 2015 up for most in Greater Cleveland/Akron (database) . October 30, 2015 . January 20, 2015 . . Exner, Rich.
  2. News: Kent City School District named a new superintendent . The Portager . June 21, 2023 . Hardesty, Tom . September 29, 2023.
  3. Book: Wardle, Michelle . Images of America: Kent. 2005. Arcadia Publishing. Charleston, South Carolina, USA. 0-7385-3381-5. 53.
  4. Book: Brown, R.C. History of Portage County Ohio. Norris, J.E.. First published in 1885. 1972. Warner, Beers, and Company. Chicago, Illinois. 441. It is not clear when the district's name was changed to the current "Kent City School District." It was still being referred to as "Franklin Union" in this book, 21 years after the name change to "Kent".
  5. Web site: About Franklin Township. 2008-05-26. Franklin Township. 2006. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080513070340/http://www.franklintownshipohio.org/about_franklin_township.htm. 2008-05-13.
  6. News: Roger. Di Paolo. New chapter for old school. Record-Courier. Record Publishing. Kent and Ravenna, Ohio. A5. 2006-03-19.
  7. Book: Kent Ohio: The Dynamic Decades. Kent Historical Society Book Committee. Darrow, Ralph . 1999. Kent Historical Society. Kent, Ohio. 14.
  8. Web site: Six District Educational Compact . 2009 . SixDistrict.com . Six District Educational Compact . 13 August 2010 . PDF . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716075851/http://www.sixdistrict.com/about/CompactHistory09.pdf . 16 July 2011 .
  9. Darrow, pp. 173-176
  10. Web site: Transportation Information . 2010 . KentSchools.org . Kent City School District . 31 August 2010.
  11. Web site: About Davey . 2010 . KentSchools.org . Kent City School District . 31 August 2010.
  12. Web site: Kent City School District Search Results . 2022–23 . . September 29, 2023.
  13. Web site: About Holden . 2010 . KentSchools.net . Kent City School District . 31 August 2010.
  14. Web site: About Longcoy . 2010 . KentSchools.net . Kent City School District . 31 August 2010.
  15. Web site: About Walls . 2010 . KentSchools.net . Kent City School District . 31 August 2010.
  16. Web site: About Stanton . 2012 . KentSchools.net . Kent City School District . October 5, 2012.
  17. Web site: Administration . 2015 . KentSchools.net . Kent City School District . June 18, 2015.
  18. News: Kent schools, Davey Tree Expert Co. exchange land on North Mantua Street and Hudson Road . May 1, 2021 . . July 19, 2021.
  19. Web site: Addresses . 2021 . TheLEAPProgram.net . July 19, 2021.