North Division High School (now North Division Virtual University High School) is one of the major public high schools in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, part of the Milwaukee Public Schools. It began operation in 1906,[1] was abolished in 2006, and was reinstituted in 2011.
Flourishing years
By 1915, it had the highest enrollment of any high school in Milwaukee, at 1082, even though it had just lost almost 200 students to the newly opened Riverside High School.[2]
"Save North Division" drive
After a $20 million renovation program (the new building, just to the east of the old site, opened in September 1978) failed to lure white students to North Division, the school board voted to turn the school into a magnet school specializing in medical and science technology. A "Coalition to Save North Division" was formed, arguing that this school which had produced many African-American leaders for Milwaukee was being abolished, displacing black students and continuing a process of placing the burden of desegregation on them (at the time, the student body was 96.6% black).[3] The Coalition eventually won: on May 1, 1980, the school board reversed itself, and North Division remained heavily African-American in composition.[4]
Abolition
North Division was abolished, and its old campus divided into three smaller charter schools, in 2004. In 2009 the Milwaukee School Board voted to return to a single, large, comprehensive high school in the old building and under the old name, effective in September 2010.[5] In Fall of 2011, it was announced that it was back in operation as North Division Virtual University High School, with "[n]ew classes, teachers and administrative staff for the 2011 - 2012 school year!".[6]
Athletics
NDHS won state championships in boys' cross country in 1958 and 1960.[7]
Notable alumni
- Rudolph Beyer, glassblower and Socialist state senator
- Gil Brandt, Vice President of player personnel for the Dallas Cowboys from 1960 to 1988
- Angna Enters, artist and performer
- Frank Glazer, pianist and composer
- Frank Gatson Jr., Director/Choreographer
- Lowell C. Kilday, United States diplomat
- Oscar Koch, U.S. Army brigadier general[8]
- Golda Meir, Prime Minister of Israel
- Gwen Moore, Congresswoman
- Vel Phillips, pioneering African-American politician
- Dave Quabius, basketball player
- Philip D. Reed, president and CEO of GE
- Harvey Scales, R&B musician
- Martin E. Schreiber, State Representative and Milwaukee alderman
- Glenn P. Turner, lawyer and Socialist state representative
- Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski
- Annette Polly Williams, state representative
References
- ↑ Watrous, Jerome Anthony. Memoirs of Milwaukee County: from the earliest historical times down to the present, including a genealogical and biographical record of representative families in Milwaukee County Western Historical Association, 1909, p. 414
- ↑ "Schools Open With 46,868 Attendance" Milwaukee Sentinel September 8, 1915; p. 4, col. 4
- ↑ Bednarek, David I. "North Division's Grades Reportedly Average Only D". Milwaukee Journal August 14, 1979; Part 2, p.6
- ↑ Mitchell, Ernie. "Messmer not alone in closing" Milwaukee Journal June 11, 1984; pp. 1, 8.
- ↑ Borsuk, Alan J. "North Division High School to make comeback in 2010", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Mar. 26, 2009
- ↑ NDHS website
- ↑ 2019 State Cross Country Meet Souvenir Program. Wisconsin Rapids, WI: Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association. November 2, 2019. p. 25.
- ↑ "Gen. Koch Rites Today In Arlington". Milwaukee Sentinel. Milwaukee, WI. May 19, 1970. p. Part 2, Page 11 – via GenealogyBank.com.