Franklin K. Lane High School

Franklin K. Lane High School

Franklin K. Lane High School
Address
999 Jamaica Avenue
Brooklyn
New York City, New York 11208
United States
Coordinates 40°41′35″N 73°52′08″W / 40.693°N 73.869°W / 40.693; -73.869Coordinates: 40°41′35″N 73°52′08″W / 40.693°N 73.869°W / 40.693; -73.869
Information
Type Public high school
Opened 1923
School board New York City Department of Education
School number K420
Principal Marlon D. Bynum
Enrollment 3536
Campus Urban
Mascot Knights

Franklin K. Lane High School (FKLHS) is a public high school in New York City, New York, United States. It began as a combined junior-senior high school in 1923 and moved into its current building in 1937.[1][2]

The school is administered by the New York City Department of Education as H.S. 420. Today the school is the campus site for five different high schools: The Academy of Innovative Technology, The Brooklyn Lab School, Cypress Hill Prep Academy, The Urban Assembly School for Collaborative Healthcare, and Multicultural High School.

Location

The campus is located on the Brooklyn/Queens border at the bottom of a steep hill at the corner of Dexter Court and Jamaica Avenue. The line separating the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, which runs along Eldert Lane from Atlantic Avenue, passes through the school and the cemetery adjacent to it.

History

The school is named for Franklin Knight Lane, United States Secretary of the Interior during the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. One of the accomplishments of his tenure was the formation of the National Park Service.

At the time Franklin K. Lane High School was built, it was one of the largest high school buildings in the world. The perimeter of the building measures approximately one-quarter mile; walking four times around it equals one mile.

The school building was a project of the WPA during the Franklin D. Roosevelt Administration.

The boys' large gymnasium is named for 1938 alumnus William "Red" Holzman. The library is named for Sam Levenson, another alumnus, Class of 1930. The Guidance Suite of offices is named for Franklin A. Thomas, former President of the Ford Foundation.

During the 1960s/1970s, Franklin K. Lane High School fell on hard times. A large part of this period was documented in " RACE WAR IN HIGH SCHOOL: The Ten Year Destruction of Franklin K. Lane High School in Brooklyn," a book By Harold Saltzman, a social studies teacher and union leader at the school during that period. Parents and teachers brought a legal action in regard to the racial imbalance and poor performance at Lane. In 1974 Judge John Dooling of the Federal Court's Southern District of New York ruled that education at the school was inferior and ruled that the school racial imbalance was to be addressed by redistricting and redesigning the school program. The "new" Franklin K. Lane opened in September 1976 with a 40% white, 30% Hispanic, and 30% African-American student body. The school thrived for a period and became known in some circles as "the miracle on Jamaica Avenue".

In 1978, Franklin K. Lane High School was one of ten schools across the nation cited by the United States Congress in the Safe School Study. The school was included in many case studies produced by the United States Government as well as private foundations, for its turnaround and for its safety in the midst of urban decline and deterioration.

In the 1970s and 1980s, numerous programs were available to assist and enhance students' academic performance: College Bound Program, Career Development Program (CDP), Co-Op Program, Study to Employment Program, (STEP), and Toward Upward Mobility Program (TUM). To address the problems of students with difficulty attending school, the SOAR program was initiated and recognized by the Federal Government for excellence. The school's General Equivalency Diploma (GED) program was one of the most successful in the city with a code of 421. Later, a parent suit brought into question the school's methods of counseling students who were not attending classes regularly. Eventually, these disruptive students were allowed to attend the school again, causing security problems. During the 1980s and 1990s, the school's magnet Law Studies Program attracted students from various parts of New York City, many of whom went on to attend prestigious universities, such as Columbia, Cornell, NYU, and Syracuse. A majority of Lane's Honors Program alumni also fared well.

On March 8, 2004, the New York Daily News' front page headline "City's Worst School" led to a story in the newspaper regarding the poor academic performance, low graduation rates, violence, and students transferring out in large numbers due to those problems.[3] In December 2007, the Department of Education announced that Franklin K. Lane would be phased out due to consistently poor performance. The school stopped accepting 9th graders in 2007 and graduated its last seniors in 2012. Not all of the replacement schools have received acceptable ratings.

Demographics

Ethnic Group Percentage
Hispanics 52%
Blacks 43%
Asians 4%
Whites 0%
Native Americans 1%

Notable alumni

Spinderella (DeeDee Roper) - Dj for Salt & Pepa

References

  1. "Franklin K Lane". The East New York Project. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  2. "City Schools Ready to Welcome Army of Pupils Sept. 13". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. September 2, 1937. p. 17. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  3. http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/city-hated-school-20-bolt-b-klyn-hs-escape-crowding-crime-scores-article-1.642200
  4. "Franklin S. Lane (Brooklyn,NY) Baseball". The Baseball Cube. Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  5. "Richie Havens supplies ecstasy". The Daily Tar Heel. February 2, 1971. p. 8. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  6. Berkow, Ira. "Red Holzman, Hall of Fame Coach, Dies at 78", The New York Times, November 15, 1998. Accessed September 15, 2008.

Sources

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