Leavitt Area High School

Leavitt Area High School
Address
21 Matthews Way
Turner, Maine 04282
United States
Coordinates 44°16′02″N 70°13′41″W / 44.2672°N 70.2280°W / 44.2672; -70.2280Coordinates: 44°16′02″N 70°13′41″W / 44.2672°N 70.2280°W / 44.2672; -70.2280
Information
School type Public, high school
School district MSAD 52
Principal Eben Shaw
Teaching staff 65
Grades 9–12
Gender Coed
Enrollment 612 (April 1, 2010)
Language English
Hours in school day 07
Campus size Medium
Campus type Rural
Color(s)      Green and      white
Song Sweet Caroline
Athletics conference KVAC
Mascot Hornet
Rival Gardiner Area High School, Mount Blue High School, Spruce Mountain High School, Winslow High School, Morse High School
Accreditation NEASC
Newspaper The Buzz
Yearbook Angelus
Communities served Turner, Leeds, & Greene
Feeder schools Tripp Middle School
Website rsu52.us

Leavitt Area High School is a public secondary school that serves grades 9–12 in Turner, Maine. It is a regional high school and serves the communities of Turner, Leeds, and Greene and is run by Maine School Administrative District 52. It is bordered by the school districts of Buckfield Junior-Senior High School, Edward Little High School, Lewiston High School, Winthrop High School, Monmouth Academy (Maine), and Cony High School.

History

The school takes its name from an 1895 gift by James Madison Leavitt, a Turner native who became a wealthy New York City manufacturer of umbrellas and parasols.[1] Leavitt donated $10,000 to the town of Turner to build a preparatory school.[2] The school opened on Jan. 20, 1897, and was dedicated to Leavitt. In 1899 the first class of eight students graduated.[3]

The school later outgrew the initial building, which now houses the Turner Homeless Shelter and the Turner Public Library. The last class graduated from the Leavitt Institute facility in 1966. In 1967 the school's name was changed to Leavitt High School, and in 1969 when the school district was consolidated, the school's name was changed to Leavitt Area High School, now located nearby the old Leavitt Institute Building.

References

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