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Central High School (Connecticut)

1876 establishments in ConnecticutAC with 0 elementsCentral High School (Connecticut) alumniConnecticut school stubsEducation in Bridgeport, Connecticut
Educational institutions established in 1876Public high schools in ConnecticutSchools in Fairfield County, Connecticut
CentralHighSchoolBridgeportCT
CentralHighSchoolBridgeportCT

Central High School is a high school in Bridgeport, Fairfield County, Connecticut in the United States. It was founded in 1876 as Bridgeport High School. In 2003 the school held 2,217 students and 152 teachers. Ethnically the students were 41% African-American, 41% Hispanic, 13% white and 4% Asian, with .1% marked as unknown.The current school building was constructed in 1963–4, and was dedicated on October 25, 1964. The school is under renovation scheduled to be complete in 2021.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Central High School (Connecticut) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Central High School (Connecticut)
Lincoln Boulevard, Bridgeport

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 41.1889 ° E -73.2059 °
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Address

Central High School (Central High School Magnet School)

Lincoln Boulevard 1
06606 Bridgeport
Connecticut, United States
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Phone number
Bridgeport Public Schools

call+12032751502

Website
bridgeportedu.net

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CentralHighSchoolBridgeportCT
CentralHighSchoolBridgeportCT
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Congregation B'nai Israel (Bridgeport, Connecticut)

Congregation B'nai Israel is a Reform Jewish synagogue located in Bridgeport, Connecticut. It is the oldest Jewish congregation in Bridgeport and the third oldest in Connecticut. B'nai Israel was established by a group of German Jewish immigrants as an Orthodox synagogue in 1859. The congregation's first rabbi was A. Jacobs. B'nai Israel established a Hebrew school in 1863.For its first fifty years, B'nai Israel did not have a permanent home. Its members met and prayed in one another's homes and in storefronts and lofts. In 1885, plans were made to erect a building for B'nai Israel. The building, which was completed in 1911, was known as the Park Avenue Temple.By 1911, when the Park Avenue Temple was completed, B'nai Israel had moved from Orthodox to Reform Judaism. Members who were unhappy with the changes left B'nai Israel and founded two of Bridgeport's other synagogues: Adath Israel (Orthodox) and Rodeph Sholom (Conservative).After World War II, B'nai Israel outgrew its building and a second structure, called the Second Park Avenue Temple, was erected, designed by the prolific synagogue architect Percival Goodman. Goodman commissioned artist Larry Rivers to create a Torah ark cloth for the new building, but Rivers' design was ultimately rejected and his work ended up in the collection of the Jewish Museum in New York City.In 2002, the temple drew attention (including an article in The New York Times) after its large junior choir, directed by Cantor Sheri Blum, recorded a CD with Cantor Bruce Benson entitled The Rock Service, Featuring Cantor Bruce Benson and the Jazz Service. This album was described as combining "original rock music with liturgically accurate chants," and was reportedly in contention for a Grammy nomination. (Benson, later the cantor at Congregation Beth Israel (Scottsdale, Arizona), also recorded a jazz service with Kenny G.) In 2009 the temple, having recently renovated and expanded its building, celebrated its 150th anniversary. As of 2009, 700 families belong to Congregation B'nai Israel and approximately 400 students are enrolled in its religious school.