place

Eagle Harbor High School

1966 establishments in Washington (state)Alternative schools in the United StatesHigh schools in Kitsap County, WashingtonPublic high schools in Washington (state)

Eagle Harbor High School is part of the Commodore Options School, which serves multiple alternative programs for the Bainbridge Island School District, including the Mosaic Home Education Partnership, Odyssey Multiage Program, and Eagle Harbor High School. Eagle Harbor High School is an alternative high school in Bainbridge Island, Washington. The high school offers ninth through twelfth grade classes and independent studies. As of 2010, Eagle Harbor High School offers three Advanced Placement courses: AP U.S. History, AP Human Geography and AP Environmental Science. Students may participate in any of the interscholastic sports programs offered on the adjacent Bainbridge High School campus, for both of the high schools run on the same schedule. Eagle Harbor students may also attend classes at the nearby Bainbridge High School. Classes at Eagle Harbor High School typically have around 20 students on average in a class. There is also only 7 main teachers.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Eagle Harbor High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Eagle Harbor High School
Northeast High School Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Eagle Harbor High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.6371944 ° E -122.5214167 °
placeShow on map

Address

Eagle Harbor High School

Northeast High School Road 9530
98110
Washington, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Phone number
Bainbridge Island School District

call+12067801646

Website
bisd303.org

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q5325105)
linkOpenStreetMap (392711224)

Share experience

Nearby Places

Winslow, Bainbridge Island, Washington

Winslow is the name of the downtown area of the city of Bainbridge Island, Washington, and is the original name of the city, named for shipbuilder Winslow Hall. It encompasses the area around the main street, Winslow Way, and is made up of approximately 1.5 square miles (3.9 km2) overlooking Eagle Harbor. The city has occupied the entire space of Bainbridge Island since February 28, 1991, when the 1.5-square-mile (3.9 km2) city of Winslow (incorporated on August 9, 1947), annexed the rest of the island after a narrowly passed November 1990 referendum. It officially remained the city of Winslow for several months, until November 7, 1991, at which time the city of Winslow was renamed the city of Bainbridge Island.Winslow Way runs about ten city blocks, and is grounded on both sides by local businesses, including a bookstore, several galleries, and multiple restaurants and bakeries. A ferry terminal, with service to Seattle's Colman Dock, boards at the east end of Winslow Way. In 2010, the census block group in which Winslow is located had a median household income of $42,000, less than half of the Island's median household income of $94,000 and one-third of several of the Island's wealthiest block groups, and also $10,000 less than national and statewide averages. More than half of Winslow households live in rental units, compared to 20% of households across the Island. These differences have in some cases created tension between Winslow and the remainder of the Island, which were highlighted during the successful initiative to annex Winslow and the remainder of the Island into a new jurisdiction noted above.

Winslow Marine Railway and Shipbuilding Company
Winslow Marine Railway and Shipbuilding Company

Winslow Marine Railway and Shipbuilding Company was a shipyard in Puget Sound that operated from 1903 until 1959 on Bainbridge Island, Washington, United States. The shipyard was built as an expansion of Hall Bros. Marine Railway & Shipbuilding Company of Port Blakely, Washington, on 77 acres (310,000 m2) near the village of Madrone, later renamed Winslow after the dead brother of shipyard owner Henry Hall. It built five-masted schooners whose design allowed cargo to be loaded both fore and aft. Different facilities were included in this yard. It were marine railway, a powerhouse, sawmill, joiner loft, warehouse, shipways.In 1916, Hall sold the Winslow yard to Captain James Griffiths, who renamed it Winslow Marine Railway & Shipbuilding Co. The following year, Griffiths leased the yard to D. W. Hartzel, Inc., which used the facility to install machinery in hulls built at other yards. After World War I, Griffiths retook control of the yard, using it to do repair work for Puget Sound's ferry operators. During World War II, the yard built steel minesweepers, employing as many as 2,300 workers. Griffiths sold the yard in 1948, and its new owners renamed it Commercial Ship Repair of Winslow. Business dwindled, and the yard closed in 1959. The property was divided into a marina, an apartment complex and a Washington State Ferries maintenance facility. Ships built for the United States Navy during World War II 4 of 95 Auk-class minesweepers (ca. 1943) Pursuit (AM-108) ... Sage (AM-111) 16 of 123 Admirable-class minesweepers (ca. 1944) Garland (AM-238) ... Impervious (AM-245) Salute (AM-294) ... Shelter (AM-301) Yard tug YTL-571 to YTL-574