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Heritage High School (Palm Bay, Florida)

2009 establishments in FloridaBrevard Public SchoolsEducational institutions established in 2009High schools in Brevard County, FloridaPalm Bay, Florida
Public high schools in Florida
Heritage High School
Heritage High School

Heritage High School is a high school in Palm Bay, Florida run by Brevard Public Schools. It is the 16th school in the district. The school is located on 65 acres (26 ha) of land with a student capacity of 2,384.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Heritage High School (Palm Bay, Florida) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Heritage High School (Palm Bay, Florida)
Pinwherry Street Northwest, Palm Bay

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N 28.002245 ° E -80.743668 °
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Heritage High School

Pinwherry Street Northwest
Palm Bay
Florida, United States
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Heritage High School
Heritage High School
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Nearby Places

Lake Hell 'n Blazes

Lake Hell 'n Blazes, Hellen Blazes or Helen Blazes, is the source of the St. Johns River, located in Brevard County, Florida, United States, about 10 miles (16 km) southwest of Melbourne. The lake is 260 acres (110 ha) in area, and is at the head of the St. Johns River.The name "Hell 'n Blazes" has been attributed to the words used by early 20th century fishermen while trying to navigate through floating islands, and to the formerly remote location of the lake. The variants "Hellen Blazes" and "Helen Blazes" have been used as euphemisms.The lake originally was in a marshy floodplain that was 10 to 20 miles (16 to 32 km) wide. As agriculture expanded into the floodplain, canals were dug draining into the lake, and the marshes were reduced to just 3 miles (4.8 km) wide near the lake. Heavy rainfall sends large quantities of polluted water into the lake. The lake had been reputed to be one of the best bass-fishing lakes in Florida, but was in decline by the 1970s. Bass stopped spawning in the lake, and rarely entered it. In 1992 the lake was clogged with hydrilla and water hyacinth. By 1994 drainage had left the lake with only a foot or two of water, grounding the floating islands it was known for.A 1992 report to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission concluded that dredging accumulated sediment from the lake bottom would restore the bass fishery in the lake. As of 2006 no funding had been approved for a dredging project.The nearby Helen Blazes archaeological site is named for the lake.