Jump to content

Bisbee High School: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 31°24′53″N 109°53′18″W / 31.414752°N 109.888264°W / 31.414752; -109.888264
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Article needs cleanup
move image into infobox
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Cleanup school|date=October 2021}}{{Infobox school
{{Infobox school
| name = Bisbee High School
| name = Bisbee High School
| image =
| image = BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL.jpg
| imagesize =
| imagesize =
| caption = The picture shown is of the Old High School in downtown Bisbee. It is the only four-story building in the country with a ground level entry on each floor. The entry shown is on the 2nd floor and was the main entry to the school. The first floor is under this and held the shop classes and the bus garage. The 2nd floor held the offices and general class rooms. The 3rd floor also was general classrooms while the 4th floor was the gym/auditorium. In the picture shown, there was a ground level entry halfway up for the 3rd floor, and at the top of the building was the ground level entry for the gym.
| caption =
| motto =
| motto =
| established =
| established =
Line 29: Line 29:
== Old Bisbee High School ==
== Old Bisbee High School ==
The old Bisbee High School is at 100 Old Douglas Rd, Bisbee, AZ ({{coord|31.4300|-109.8919|region:US-AZ_type:edu}})
The old Bisbee High School is at 100 Old Douglas Rd, Bisbee, AZ ({{coord|31.4300|-109.8919|region:US-AZ_type:edu}})
[[File:BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL.jpg|300px|none|thumb|The picture shown is of the Old High School in downtown Bisbee. It is the only four-story building in the country with a ground level entry on each floor. The entry shown is on the 2nd floor and was the main entry to the school. The first floor is under this and held the shop classes and the bus garage. The 2nd floor held the offices and general class rooms. The 3rd floor also was general classrooms while the 4th floor was the gym/auditorium. In the picture shown, there was a ground level entry halfway up for the 3rd floor, and at the top of the building was the ground level entry for the gym.]]


== New Bisbee High School ==
== New Bisbee High School ==

Revision as of 23:01, 1 November 2021

Bisbee High School
The picture shown is of the Old High School in downtown Bisbee. It is the only four-story building in the country with a ground level entry on each floor. The entry shown is on the 2nd floor and was the main entry to the school. The first floor is under this and held the shop classes and the bus garage. The 2nd floor held the offices and general class rooms. The 3rd floor also was general classrooms while the 4th floor was the gym/auditorium. In the picture shown, there was a ground level entry halfway up for the 3rd floor, and at the top of the building was the ground level entry for the gym.
Address
Map
325 School Terrace Rd

,
85603

United States
Coordinates31°24′53″N 109°53′18″W / 31.414752°N 109.888264°W / 31.414752; -109.888264
Information
School typePublic high school
School districtBisbee Unified School District
Teaching staff22.00 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment295 (2018–19)[1]
Student to teacher ratio13.41[1]
Color(s)Red/gray
MascotPuma
Websitewww.busd.k12.az.us/BHS/

Bisbee High School is a high school in Bisbee, Arizona. It is part of the Bisbee Unified School District, which also operates an elementary school and a junior high school. The high school runs on a four-day school week.

Old Bisbee High School

The old Bisbee High School is at 100 Old Douglas Rd, Bisbee, AZ (31°25′48″N 109°53′31″W / 31.4300°N 109.8919°W / 31.4300; -109.8919)

New Bisbee High School

The current school was built in 1957/58 at 325 School Terrace Rd, Bisbee, AZ. The campus was designed by Edward L. Varney Associates of Phoenix. The construction contract to build the new campus was awarded to D. O. Norton & Son Construction Co. and Mullen Construction Co. both of Phoenix.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Bisbee High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  2. ^ "Arizona Builder and Contractor, December 1957, Vol. 20, No. 5". azmemory.azlibrary.gov. Retrieved 2021-01-13.