Wyandanch_Union_Free_School_District

Wyandanch Union Free School District

Wyandanch Union Free School District

Public school district located in Suffolk County, Long Island, New York, United States


The Wyandanch Union Free School District (also known as Union Free School District No. 9 and often abbreviated as WUFSD) is a public school district headquartered in and serving the community of Wyandanch, in Suffolk County, Long Island, New York, United States.

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History

The area which now constitutes the Wyandanch Union Free School District was part of the Deer Park Union Free School District until 1923. The Deer Park UFSD built the first permanent school building in Wyandanch on Straight Path at 20th Street in 1913. A modern Wyandanch grade school opened in September 1937, built for $120,000 – $54,000 of which was provided by the New Deal Public Works Authority.[2] An addition to the Straight Path school was built in 1949 to accommodate the district's growing population.

In 1967, seven Wyandanch parents petitioned Dr. Gordon Wheaton, the Third Supervisory District principal, to dissolve the Wyandanch School District No. 9. The parents, supported by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, also asked Dr. Wheaton to order the 2,295 students in the Wyandanch schools (86 per cent of whom were African-American) to be divided equally into the nearby and more affluent, predominantly white Half Hollow Hills, Deer Park, North Babylon, West Babylon and Farmingdale School Districts. The Wyandanch school board (consisting of five African-Americans and one white man) opposed, and noted that the recently hired Superintendent of Schools had proposed a "$1,000,000 program designed to make Wyandanch a model school district." The superintendent noted that "the uprooting of culturally disadvantaged students to schools where the educational program is planned for the middle class would have damaging effects on our community's children." Rather than wait for a decision by Dr. Wheaton, the NAACP appealed directly to Dr. Allen, the chief of the State Education Department. On July 24, 1968, Allen rejected the petition to dissolve the Wyandanch School District; he told The New York Times that "serious obstacles imposed by existing law" prevented "dissolution of the district," which the Times reported "is now 91.5 per cent non-white."[3]

In 1979, teachers in the Wyandanch School District went on strike for two months. The Wyandanch Teacher's Association demanded a 32 percent wage increase over three years, limitation of class size to 32 students, and teacher input in educational policy decisions. A 13.3% increase was turned down; a final compromise granted the teachers a 19.5% salary increase.[4]

In 2010–11, the New York State Department of Education removed Wyandanch Memorial High School – the district's sole high school – from its "Needs Improvement" list and restored it to "In Good Standing" status for the 2010–11 school year.[5][6]

Elementary schools

In 1956, the Mount Avenue Elementary School was opened, at a cost of $1,155,000; in 1969, the school was renamed in honor of, slain Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King Jr.[7] On October 2, 1966, the $1.3 million, 29-room, Milton L. Olive Elementary School was opened at Garden City Avenue and South 37th Street with 870 pupils; the school was named for Milton Lee Olive III, an African-American private from Chicago who served in Vietnam where he saved the lives of four of his comrades by falling on an enemy grenade, an act for which he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. 70% of the students in the Wyandanch School District were African-American in 1966.[8]

In August 1958, the Wyandanch Board of Education began planning the development of a junior-senior high school for Wyandanch. Wyandanch started a 9th grade class in 1957–1958 and added a class a year until the high school opened. The school district obtained 10 acres (40,000 m2) between South 32nd Street and Little East Neck Road and between Garden City Avenue and Brooklyn Avenue by condemnation for the high school and its athletic fields. The groundbreaking for the school took place on December 6, 1959, and the school opened in September 1961.[9]

The LaFrancis Hardiman Early Childhood Center opened for pre-K education in 1969 and was named for a resident who had been killed in the Vietnam War in 1967.[10][11][12] The original center was replaced in 1999 by the LaFrancis Hardiman Early Childhood Wing of the Martin Luther King Elementary School, having been demolished in 1996.[13]

Schools


References

  1. "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for WYANDANCH UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved 2023-10-01.
  2. "Two Long Island Villages Approve Propositions for New School Buildings," Suffolk County News (Sayville) October 25, 1935: 9; "Activities of School Supervisory Dist. 3," The Long Islander (Huntington) November 19, 1937: 12; "Deer Park Wyandanch," Lindenhurst Star, September 11, 1937; "Wyandanch Dedicates Its New PWA School," Lindenhurst Star, November 12, 1937: 9
  3. C. Geral Fraser, "L.I. District First Target," New York Times, November 16, 1967; Jim Toedtman, "NAACP Bids State Act On Wyandanch", Newsday, November 16, 1967: 5; "Wyandanch Split By N.A.A.C.P. Plan," November 17, 1967: 38; John Childs, "School Board In Wyandanch Rejects Plan," Newsday; Gurney Williams, "What's Good For Wyandanch?" Newsday, January 8, 1968: 6-8W; Frances X. Clines, "State Weighing L.I. School Plan," New York Times, July 14, 1968: 32; Frances X. Clines, "Wyandanch Plan Refused by Allen," New York Times, July 26, 1968: 34.
  4. Shawn G. Kennedy, "Wyandanch Teachers Strike Enters 7th Week in Standoff," New York Times, October 30, 1979: B2; "Wyandanch Teachers Gain a Tentative Pact After Long Walkout," New York Times, November 16, 1979: B4; "School Strike Ends," New York Times, November 17, 1979.
  5. P12.nysed.gov, John Hildebrand, "Schools added, taken off 'needs improvement' list," Newsday, November 4, 2010
  6. Wyandanch School District, Town of Babylon
  7. "L.I. School Named For Negro Soldier Who Died a Hero," New York Times, October 3, 1966: 26.
  8. News stories in Newsday and the Babylon Town Leader.
  9. Progressing in Education: Chief School Officer: 1968–69 Annual Report: Wyandanch Public Schools.
  10. Prados, John (2009). Vietnam: the history of an unwinnable war, 1945–1975. University of Kansas Press. pp. 226–7. ISBN 978-0-7006-1634-3.
  11. "3 LIers Killed in Viet; One on Hill at Dak To". Newsday. November 21, 1967.
  12. Altherr, Stacy (September 20, 1999). "Martin Luther King Elementary Opens New Wing". Newsday. p. G23.

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