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Homer Senior High School (New York)

New York (state) school stubsPublic high schools in New York (state)Schools in Cortland County, New York

Homer Central High School is a grades 9-12 high school which is part of the Homer Central School District in Homer, New York. The current principal is Douglas VanEtten with Jim McGory appointed as vice principal. Tammy Reed is the administrative secretary. The school mascot is a Trojan warrior.Homer Central High School traces its history back to 1819, when it was known as Cortland Academy.Homer Central High School has a total of 1,951 students as of 2017-2018

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Homer Senior High School (New York) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Homer Senior High School (New York)
Copeland Avenue,

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N 42.630446 ° E -76.190894 °
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Homer High School

Copeland Avenue
13077
New York, United States
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Glenwood Cemetery (Homer, New York)
Glenwood Cemetery (Homer, New York)

The Glenwood Cemetery in the village of Homer, New York is a historic rural cemetery which was established in 1867. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019.The village of Homer is within the town of Homer in Cortland County, New York. Some previous burials from another location were relocated to the cemetery after it was formally established.A first cemetery association in Homer was established in 1847; many of its early burials were later removed to the Glenwood Cemetery, whose association was incorporated in 1862. A plaque near the entrance to the cemetery states that "Glenwood was opened and named in the year of 1867 by Paris Barber 1814–1876, a public spirited citizen of Homer New York." The Village of Homer took over management of the cemetery in 1946, upon request from the association. Eventually a Village Cemetery Commission, part of the Village of Homer, took over responsibility to oversee the cemetery.It was deemed significant for NRHP listing for reasons including that its landscape design was deemed "a representative intact example of a mid-nineteenth century Rural Cemetery with portions at extreme east and west ends reflecting twentieth century design trends in cemetery management." Another reason was its architecture, specifically it having three significant buildings, one being the combination of the Earle Abbey Mausoleum (1923) and its receiving vault (1906).