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City Honors High School

2005 establishments in CaliforniaEducational institutions established in 2005Los Angeles County, California school stubsPublic high schools in Los Angeles County, CaliforniaSchools in Inglewood, California
Use mdy dates from June 2017

City Honors High School (CHHS) also known as City Honors International Preparatory School, is a charter high school in the Inglewood Unified School District (IUSD), serving grades 9–12. City Honors International Preparatory School (CHIPS) received another 6-year accreditation by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) in 2022. (2022-2028) City Honors High School is a school on the corner of 120 W Regent Street and Queen Street in Downtown Inglewood. City Honors is a college preparatory charter school and is designed to allow their students to graduate from high school with an associate of/in arts (AA) degree along with their high school diploma.

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

City Honors High School
West Kelso Street, Inglewood

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N 33.95857 ° E -118.36207 °
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Hillcrest High School

West Kelso Street
90304 Inglewood
California, United States
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Inglewood station
Inglewood station

The Inglewood depot in Inglewood, California, was built by Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway in September 1887. From 1902 to 1928 it was used for the Venice–Inglewood Line of the Los Angeles Railroad Pacific Electric Railway Depot, and then for Southern Pacific freight cars until the 1970s when the line was abandoned. The depot appeared in a 1920 Buster Keaton short called One Week and it remained a popular filming location for decades.According to a long-time station agent, before World War II, freight cars left the Inglewood depot carrying beans, bean straw and “loads of stoves, chemicals and fertilizers.”During World War II, the depot handled war matériel and enabled transportation of personnel. A 1943 Associated Press story noted that rail transport was used so extensively during the war that it was affecting the local film industry: "In spite of wartime obstacles, all studios are making train scenes whenever it is necessary to the film plot. Now, it’s no longer possible to take a troupe over to Glendale, Pasadena, Inglewood or Alhambra for that purpose. Station platforms and trains are full. Once quiet spots along the main line are now seeing a train pass every 15 minutes, whether a film director likes it or not." Post-war, the station handled household goods, missile parts, toys, furniture and “tank car products.”The depot survived until the 1970s when it was irreparably damaged in an arson fire and demolished in 1972. (Another source says the fire was in 1972 and the demolition was 1974.)