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Dunbar High School (Bessemer, Alabama)

1923 establishments in AlabamaAlabama Registered Historic Place stubsBessemer, AlabamaEducational institutions established in 1923National Register of Historic Places in Jefferson County, Alabama
Public high schools in AlabamaUse mdy dates from August 2023
DunbarHS Bessemer 8020481
DunbarHS Bessemer 8020481

Paul William Dunbar High School, originally Bessemer Colored High School, was a public school for African-American students which operated in Bessemer, Alabama from 1923 to 1980. It served grades 1 through 12 when it opened, and its first graduating class matriculated in 1927 under principal J. B. Bickerstaff. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 18, 2011.

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

Dunbar High School (Bessemer, Alabama)
28th Street North,

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Latitude Longitude
N 33.413611111111 ° E -86.948888888889 °
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Address

Dunbar High School

28th Street North
35020
Alabama, United States
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DunbarHS Bessemer 8020481
DunbarHS Bessemer 8020481
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Nearby Places

Downtown Bessemer Historic District
Downtown Bessemer Historic District

The Downtown Bessemer Historic District, in Bessemer, Alabama, is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. The listing included 70 contributing buildings on 26 acres (11 ha).The district is roughly bounded by 21st St., N., Carolina Ave., 19th St., N., 5th Ave., N. and the former Southern railroad tracks. Besides the 70 contributing buildings, it also included 71 non-contributing buildings and six non-contributing sites.Some of the sites are: the former Southern Railway Terminal Station (1916), 1905 Alabama Avenue, which was already separately listed on the National Register. Later became the "Bessemer Hall of History", a museum. It is a Prairie Style-influenced brick railroad passenger station. Bessemer City Hall (1938–41), 1800 Third Avenue., a three-story buff brick building built in a modified Art Deco style, as a Works Progress Administration project. It has a square corner clock tower with the old City Hall's 1890 clock. It includes the City Auditorium. Jefferson County Courthouse (1919), 1801 Third Avenue, a three-story buff brick building with "the enframed block design popular in the early decades of the 20th century, especially for government buildings". Its "end bays project slightly with recessed panels and inset Ionic columns; five bays in central section between that are defined by slightly projecting piers." Berney Bank Block (1887), with Richardsonian Romanesque features Alabama Power Building (1926)