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Hayden High School (Franklin, Virginia)

African-American history of VirginiaBuildings and structures in Franklin, VirginiaNational Register of Historic Places in Franklin, VirginiaNorthern Virginia Registered Historic Place stubsPublic high schools in Virginia
School buildings completed in 1953School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Hayden High 2020
Hayden High 2020

Hayden High School is a historic high school complex for African-American students located in Franklin, Virginia. The main building was completed in 1953 and is a two-story, "L"-plan brick-clad building with two smaller one-story additions. Associated with the main school are two 1969 one-story classroom buildings situated behind the school. Hayden High School is an important site in the fight over both equalization and desegregation of public schools. The school was closed in the 1980s, after housing a middle school.The school was named for educator Della Irving Hayden (1851-1924), founder of the Franklin Normal and Industrial Institute. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.

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

Hayden High School (Franklin, Virginia)
Hayden Drive,

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N 36.667777777778 ° E -76.926666666667 °
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Apostolic Faith Church of God

Hayden Drive
23851
Virginia, United States
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Hayden High 2020
Hayden High 2020
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Nearby Places

Elm Grove (Courtland, Virginia)
Elm Grove (Courtland, Virginia)

Elm Grove, also known as the Williams-Rick House, is a historic plantation house located near Courtland, Southampton County, Virginia. The original section was built about 1790, and enlarged by its subsequent owners through the 19th century. The main section is a two-story, six-bay, frame dwelling sheathed in weatherboard. It has a side gable roof and exterior end chimneys. Three noteworthy early outbuildings survive. Directly north of the house is a single-story, one-cell frame building probably erected as an office and used at the turn of the century as a school. West of the house is a frame dairy with a gable roof, beaded weatherboards, and louvred ventilator above the door on the front. Most interesting is the smokehouse which stands northwest of the house. This low, square building has saddle-notched round log walls and encloses four srnokepits. This is the only known early example of a multiple-pit smokehouse in Virginia. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.The tract now known as Elm Grove was left to Isaac Williams by his father, Jonah Williams, in 1771. After Isaac Williams's death in 1788, the property remained in his estate until 1803, when 342 acres of his land were transferred to his son Edwin. After Edwin Williams's death in 1811, the estate was divided among several heirs, all of whom soon sold their portions to Richard and Oswin Ricks, a father and son. In 1832 Oswin Ricks sold the property to Dr. Robert Murray, an Irish-born physician. Tradition states that Murray operated a school at Elm Grove at mid-century, a belief substantiated by the 1850 census which lists fourteen girls and two boys (in addition to the Murrays's own six children) residing at the house at that time. Murray sold the property to William W. Briggs in 1858. In 1887 Lucius Lelius Manry bought Elm Grove. It remained in the Manry family until the death of Edward Smith Manry in 1996.