Given that my 3rd blog Howard County's Past Present and Future hasn't taken off like I would have hoped, I have decided to combine it with this blog and rename it Columbia and Howard County's Future. All posts from the Howard County Blog will be rerouted here and this address will remain the same. All posts future that don't involve Columbia will be posted here.
Please read all new posts that were brought over to this blog from the defunct blog. They're all here now.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Friday, July 27, 2012
Running Brook Addition: We Can't Simply Slap It On
Like Longfellow, Running Brook is an odd School. The most
strikingly odd part is that the front doors don't overlook the parking
lot, a blank almost windowless side of the School does and one has to
walk around it to get to the front doors. In addition to being my Elementary Alma Mater, Running Brook's enrollment has skyrocketed from
288 in 1994 to 435 in 2012 without a single square foot of added space.
In the coming years enrollment will continue to rise as Downtown
Columbia is developed all of which for now is located in the Running
Brook District. With a current capacity of 405, an addition of some sort
must be built within the next few years, but we can't just slap it on.
Running Brook opened in 1970 with the then stylish "open classroom"
concept. Once the 1980s rolled around, that style has faded and in 1984
partitions were added that completely enclosed some classrooms and
partially enclosed others. The open concept hadn't died completely with
this limited renovation. Also in 1984, the multipurpose room was
divided in three which made for the music room, G&T room, and O/T
room. A new full sized Gym was added that year as was a two classroom
addition that at the time housed the RECC and PREK. 1984 was the last
and only time additions were made to Running Brook.
In 2006 Running Brook underwent a complete interior systemic
renovation that included getting rid of any and all open classrooms once
and for all. Although this renovation was long overdue and by enlcosing
classrooms it did not include any additions to the building. nor did it
add windows or a "reskinned exterior." What it did include was an
expanded parking lot that stems from the fornt doors to the playground.
Now the footprint of the building didn't grow during this renovation but
the enclosing of the open classrooms did create a lerger building
capacity. A total of seven additional classrooms of 22 seats was created
bringing the capacity up from 261 before the renovations up to its
current capacity of 405. A combination of growth and redistricting has
made Running Brook outgrow its 405 capacity. In the coming years
enrollment will continue to go up breaking 5, 6, or even 700 Students.
Seeing that the redevelopment of Downtown Columbia will have an
effect on Running Brook where currently all of it goes, the County has
elected to build a 100 seat addition to Running Brook. As the name of
this post suggests, we can't just "slap on" this addition. Running Brook
has some very small areas that would need to addressed that a mere
classroom addition won't correct. First, the front entrance doors don't
face the road, in newer Schools this is needed so that Administrative
Staff can keep an eye on the goings on in the Parking Lot. Where the
Art, Music, and O/T rooms currently are is the approximate location of
where the entrance doors should be as well as the new Administration Suite
should be. This will also require a new fine arts suite because the new
front office will take up the current undersized space. This fine arts
addition should contain 2 art rooms 2 music rooms and a band room which
is what new larger Schools and an expanded Running Brook should contain.
Also newer Schools contain a second Gym or "PE Activity Room" that when
adding on to Running Brook must be considered. Also there's the obvious
need to expand the Cafeteria, that was too small 20 some odd years when
I attended this School and enrollment was much lower. An expanded
Cafeteria is the only way all these additional Students can fit into the
School. I've opened up a huge can of worms that Running Brook needs
that doesn't even address the original intent; a 100 seat classroom
addition. Like I said, we simply can't just slap on this addition.
| My vision for a new Running Brook |
There are options open that will hold the additional Students until
a new Running Brook opens. First there's Longfellow, it will begin a
massive modernization project in the coming years which will include an
addition. Longfellow's enrollment is projected to remain the same in the
foreseeable future so perhaps a larger Longfellow be of some
assistance.
Second there's Bryant Woods, even with a new large Running Brook can't hold all of the new growth on its own so eventually redistricting into Bryant Woods would be inevitable. Bryant Woods is growing on its own already as homes that have long since held empty nesters are housing young Families once again. Bryant Woods is laid out very differently than Running Brook which makes it much easier to "slap on" an addition. Perhaps redistricting part of Downtown Bryant Woods and adding onto before rebuilding Running Brook is the way to go. At the same time, the Neighborhood of Faulkner Ridge can be redistricted to the newly modernized Longfellow that has capacity. Also Faulkner Ridge is within walking distance of Longfellow so transportation costs won't increase. Speaking of Faulkner Ridge, its closed Elementary School can act as a holding School during the rebuilding of Running Brook which it will do for Longfellow and probably Swansfield.
Second there's Bryant Woods, even with a new large Running Brook can't hold all of the new growth on its own so eventually redistricting into Bryant Woods would be inevitable. Bryant Woods is growing on its own already as homes that have long since held empty nesters are housing young Families once again. Bryant Woods is laid out very differently than Running Brook which makes it much easier to "slap on" an addition. Perhaps redistricting part of Downtown Bryant Woods and adding onto before rebuilding Running Brook is the way to go. At the same time, the Neighborhood of Faulkner Ridge can be redistricted to the newly modernized Longfellow that has capacity. Also Faulkner Ridge is within walking distance of Longfellow so transportation costs won't increase. Speaking of Faulkner Ridge, its closed Elementary School can act as a holding School during the rebuilding of Running Brook which it will do for Longfellow and probably Swansfield.
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| My proposed redistricting for West Columbia |
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Longfellow and Faulkner Ridge Modernizations
Well it appears that some of my not so popular School Modernization
Methods have gotten into the heads of the School's planning department.
The words "Holding School" at one point were that of a foreign language
until recently and School Modernizations were phased with Students
attending Schools during construction. Also more recent renovations have
made drastic changes to the exteriors of the School Buildings such as
Northfield, Thunder Hill, and Phelps Luck. Although the renovation of
Stevens Forest wil add many more windows to the building the ugly masonry facade won't change which is a crying shame.
Next on the renovation schedule is Longfellow. Built in 1970,
renovated in 1986, and has received additions in 1994 and 2007.
Longfellow was always a weird building. It was built on a site with
hills that although the School is one level, there are a lot of steps
throughout the building as a result of the hilly topography. It was
first built with no Gym and the 1994 addition that gave one to the
School was at the front of the building and is away from the Ball fields.
Speaking of Ball fields the School doesn't have the traditional Baseball
diamonds and back stops that an Elementary School is supposed to have.
This anomaly can be traced back to the early 1970s when a neighbor of
the School complained about noise from the Ball fields and Basketball
Courts on the Blacktop. To appease this Neighbor, the School Board
elected to get rid of the Baseball Diamonds and the Basketball citing
that there are Basketball Courts at the Neighborhood Center next to the
School.
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| Current Floor Plan of Longfellow from HoCo Assesments |
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| One of the Options for Renovation from HCPSS.org |
Given the cost and the scope of the work needed at Longfellow it
became more and more apparent that the Student Population shouldn't be
attending School there during the course of the work. Faulkner Ridge
Elementary closed in 1983 and was used as a staff development
Center until it was emptied out in 2011. The option of using came up and
I couldn't have been more thrilled. Why? I think if using a Holding
School becomes an option it might make for larger renovations and modernizations and perhaps even a replacement School. As I was reading
the Columbia Flier earlier this week, the option of completely tearing
down Longfellow and starting anew was brought up. A brand new Longfellow
will make better use of the small site the School is located on. A new
School could then be two stories with the Gym located near the Ball fields, Administration Suite with an eye shot of the Parking Lot and
everything will be ADA compliant. With the School being two stories
instead of one, more acreage can be used for Ball fields and Parking
Spaces.
| If Longfellow were rebuilt I would like it to look like this |
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| Proposed Renovations to Faulkner Ridge for use as a Holding School |
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Capacity In the West
When I ended my previous post I said that perhaps it was time to
close another School in the future. Yes that was a lead for a future
post and yes it's time that in the Western part of Howard County it's
time to close not one not two but three Schools in the coming years. The
County over projected the amount if Schools needed in the West thinking
that new development will yield the same large numbers that urbanized
areas in the County will and have. As a result these projections have
caused the County to overbuild some Schools and or build costly
additions when all that was needed would have been portable classrooms
for a few years until populations had leveled off.
In addition to the rural west Columbia's River Hill Village has
been yielding smaller numbers of School aged Children for quite some
time. River Hill was built at a very fast pace which doesn't allow for
good cycles of School Districts. For example in the Northfield School
District the rate of homes built is staggered with homes old, new, and
everything in between. This allows for some Neighborhoods not to have
very many School Children and others to have a boom in the number of
School Children while the School population doesn't drastically change,
only the Neighborhoods in which they come from do. The Gray Rock Farms
Neighborhood is yielding fewer while the Dunloggin Neighborhood is
yielding more. In River Hill all the Homes were built within 10 years of
each other so a few years ago all the Neighborhoods were yielding huge
numbers of children while now just a moderate number and in a couple of
years very few. This means that all these new and expanded Schools that
serve River Hill will be grossly under capacity.
So what should have happened? I think enrollment trends should have
been studied closer to see whether or not these large enrollment
numbers were here to stay. New housing in the rural west has dropped off
considerably as those relocating to Howard County prefer the more
urbanized lifestyle that Columbia, Ellicott City, and Elkridge provide.
In addition the west has gotten too expensive in this day and age and
with Retail being so far away and gas being so expensive it would be a
matter of time before home builders in Howard County began looking
elsewhere and began building higher density homes outside of the rural
west which is exactly what has happened.
With all this knowledge it seems silly that the County felt the
need to build not one but two new Schools with capacities of almost 800
Students each. I'm talking about Dayton Oaks and the Bushy Park of
course. The net gain brought on by these two schools is a staggering
1176 Students as the old Bushy Park had a Capacity of 440. Dayton Oaks
never should have been built, there I said it. Dayton Oaks opened in
2006 with barely 500 students leaving some classrooms empty as
enrollment there has continued to decline. The two Schools its District
was formed with (Clarksville and Tridelphia Ridge) although crowded at
the time, would have leveled off in a couple of years giving each
School optimal enrollment ratios. Also when Dayton Oaks opened why were
Clarksville and Tridelphia Ridge given additions of 65- 70 seats each?
Usually when a new School is built, existing Schools don't need
additions because the need for them is wiped out once the new School
opens. Clarksville even if its capacity was left at 565 instead of 634
would have probably been able to make do with its old district and then
some had Dayton Oaks never happened. Clarksville still could have been
available to assist Fulton this year when it was decided that it would
relieve Hammond and Gorman Crossing in the southeast.
Not only was Dayton Oaks built but Bushy Park was replaced with a
new building that was a twin of Dayton Oaks. Even when the new Bushy
Park was in its planning stages there were some red flags that
enrollment couldn't support a new School that large such
as Kindergarten classes being smaller and enrollment at Lisbon
shrinking. If these red flags were taking seriously perhaps Dayton Oaks
(assuming it was built) could have provided short term relief to Bushy
Park as could Lisbon considering that its capacity was upped from 434 to
553. The new Bushy Park opened in 2007 with a building close to twice
its size yet there was no redistricting into the School. In fact its
district has remained the same since Tridelphia Ridge opened in 1998. I
guess it was assumed that Bushy Park despite its smaller Kindergarten
classes and the drop of new building would continue to yield high
numbers and continue to increase. Bushy Park has never come close to its
capacity of 788 and just like Dayton Oaks it won't come close.
Given that both Dayton Oaks and Bushy Park are brand new they can't
close despite every indication that building them was a mistake.
However that doesn't make the fact that Western Howard County as a whole
is grossly under populated when compared to the amount of seats in the
region and that no amount of redistricting can make it otherwise unless
Schools are closed. Obviously a big cause of this excess space; the big
new Schools can't be closed but I can think of two older Schools that can be
retired and as a result both Bushy Park and Dayton Oaks will absorb the
population of one School each which will greatly reduce the excess
space.
First there's West Friendship, opened in 1925 this is easily Howard
County's oldest functioning School across the board. When Dayton Oaks
opened in 2006 West Friendship's District was reduced with a big chunk
now attending Tridelphia Ridge. As the past six years wore on,
enrollment at West Friendship has been on a continuous decline with no
end in sight. Bushy Park is set to dip below 600 next year and in a
few years below 500 as well and with Bushy Park's capacity at 788 and
West Friendship's enrollment barely 200 Bushy Park can absorb West
Friendship easily bringing enrollment there at an acceptable level. West
Friendship will close and can be used as a holding School for Schools
undergoing large renovations (modernizations) and eventually as a
satellite campus for Manor Woods. West Friendship can house grades 4 and
5 of the Manor Woods district as the Turf Valley Development will cause
Manor Woods to outgrow its current campus.
The other Elementary School that's old and under populated is
Clarksville. Clarksville opened in its current location in 1964 and
whenever a new Elementary School has opened in that area Clarksville has
had to redraw its population from somewhere else. Due to the sheer
numbers of Schools that have opened in the west, Clarksville has run out
of Neighborhoods to draw fom. It's not Clarksville's fault, it's just
that too many Schools were buit in this region. In the coming years
Clarksvile is projected to drop well below 300 Students despite a
capacity of 634. Just like West Friendship, neighboring Schools don't
have the population to the population redistrict into Clarksville.
In order to keep newer Schools in the west open such as Dayton Oaks,
Tridelphia Ridge, Pointers Run, and Bushy Park open Clarksville have
to close. All of Clarksville will be absorbed by Dayton Oaks which is
also slated to be less than half full. Dayton Oaks not only can support
all of Clarksville but can it can still support the 2012 redistricting
of the Highland area from Fulton.
In addition to Dayton Oaks allowing for Fulton to expand
its district to the east, Pointers Run which is also slated to
drop considerably will assist Fulton by redistricting large amounts of
students there this coming School year. As part of my long standing
commitment to modernizing older Schools I have introduced holding
Schools as an option for Schools that require a large amount of work if
not a total teardow. Faulkner Ridge will be one of the Schools which
will leave the offices there homeless. I have introduced the idea of
having Pointers Run fill that need by having a wing of the School walled
off and dedicated to those offices. In order to reduce the capcacity of
Pointers Run down to 556 from 776, I have redistricted the Clarksville
Hunt Neighborhood into Clemens Crossing instead of Pointers Run.
In a similar move I have introduced that idea to Tridelphia Ridge
which will wall off three classrooms to used as the "Benson Branch
Community Center" which will complement the proposed Park of the same
name across the street. This will bring the capacity of Tridelphia Ridge
down to 478, from 544 its original capacity which is closer to current
enrollment.
In addition to the 2 Elementary Schools I have
slated for closure, I have included a Middle School as well. Its date
will be pushed to 2015 instead of right away. The Middle School,
although it was once very crowded is Clarksville Middle. Just like the
Elementary Schools on its district the population will drop to just over
300 in the coming years. With a Capacity of 662 and having the oldest
building when compared to other Middle Schools nearby, Clarksville is
the best option. This time instead of one School absorbing the whole
population, it will be divided into two. The Phesant Ridge area of River
Hill will go to Folly Quarter as well as the Highland currently
attending Lime Kiln. The area of Folly Quarter that goes to Glenelg will
be redistricted to Glenwood. The Pointers Run area of River Hill will
go to Lime Klin where space has opened due to the Highland area now
going to Folly Quarter. Clarksville Middle will still function as a
holding School the first School it would is Glenwood whose building has
aged is due for a Modernization.
Although High Schools in the West will be well under capacity,
no High Schools need to close. There does need to be some redistricting
in order to relieve crowding and have a viable population return to
Schools that need more Students. The western edges of both Reservoir and
Atholton will be redistricted to River Hill where enrollment is on the
decline. There has been talk of moving the JROTC program out of Howard
High due to crowding and the fact that Oakland Mills supports that
program as well. With Marriotts Ridge being less populated than
projected there has been talk of moving Howard's program there. I
support that proposition as it will balance out enrollment across the
board. This move will not however delete the need for a 13th High School
in Elkridge.As enrollment trends evolve to favor densely populated urbanized parts of Howard County, enrollment in the west was expected to drop off especially when considering that Schools were overbuilt when simply redistricting and adding portables would have taken care of the problem short term. Since this wasn't the case in order for Schools to function properly, some Schools will have to close to balance out enrollment and capacity.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Bygone Schools of the Past
Given that crowding has been effecting Howard County Schools for
decades on end it's hard to believe that Howard County has former
Schools that have closed. No matter how hard it may be to believe it's
true and I've done the research to prove it. Now I know what you're
thinking; Wilde Lake High and Bushy Park Elementary come to mind
although their old buildings have closed they were replaced by new
buildings and that says nothing about enrollment declines in fact that
shows that enrollment is projected to increase at the time these
replacement Schools were built. This begs the question; Where are these
bygone Schools of the past?
Not unlike every Jurisdiction in the Country Howard
County used to have segregated Schools. Brown vs. Board of Education
changed this and quite a few Schools were forced to close as a result.
Some very small Schools whose opening date I'm not sure of closed as a
result. There used to a Highland Elementary, a Dayton Elementary (Not
today's Dayton Oaks) and a Cooksville Elementary. All of these
Schools were hardly bigger than a one room School house and the lie that
was "separate but equal" could not have been more true. All of these
Schools closed in 1964 when the current Clarksville Elementary opened as
an integrated School except for Cookesville which was absorbed by West
Friendship. Yes the current Clarksville Elementary isn't the first that
was located roughly where the Ten Oaks Ballroom and Fire Station now
stands. There was also an Elkridge Colored School that closed but it was
absorbed by the White Elkridge Elementary or the new Waterloo
Elementary rather than Clarksville.
Perhaps the only other segregated Black Elementary School of that
era was Fells Lane Elementary. That school opened in 1955 and only
operated as a School for 10 years and closed in 1965 as segregated
Schools had to be discontinued as part of the Civil Rights Act. Today
Fells Lane Elementary has been functioning as the Rogers Carter
Community Center but as part of the Hilltop and Ellicott
Terrace redevelopment plan the old School will be torn down and a new
Community Center whose floor plan mirrors that of a Community Center and
not a School. Fells Lane was probably the best funded School that was
blacks only which doesn't say much.
There used to be a Scaggsville Elementary (not pictured) and it functioned as a
School until 1971 when Hammond Elementary and Middle opened. East of
Route 29 where Hammond opened it was projected to high growth and
Scaggsville Elementary located west of Route 29 was not projected to
have growth surrounding the School. Hammond was built to house its own
future growth and the population of Scaggsville Elementary. As a
result, Scaggsville closed when Hammond opened. Today Scaggsville exists
as the Southern Howard County Police Station located behind the ill
fated Cherry Tree Shopping Center. The Community of Scaggsville exists
east of Route 29 but the old Elementary School is just west of Route 29
in what today is thought of as Fulton.
In 1973 when Laurel Woods (pictured) opened, the small obsolete Savage
Elementary closed.15 years later Bollman Bridge opened. The whole story
can be found on this blog.
In 1976 Ellicott City Elementary closed. Before Schools were integrated
Ellicott City Elementary was a whites only School. It was
located on College Avenue overlooking Historic Ellicott City. This was a
very old School predating the original Ellicott Mills Middle that
opened in 1939. This was once housed Ellicott City High School as well
as the Elementary School. In 1939 Ellicott City High moved to Montgomery
Road until 1952 when Howard opened. Ellcott City then became solely a
Junior High School. It was renamed Ellicott Mills Middle in 1987 and was
rebuilt on the same site in 2001. Ellicott City Elementary closed when
Worthington opened in 1976. The old Ellicott City Elementary burned down
in the 1980s after being vacated for several years. Although the
Ellicott City Elementary district was sent to Worthington (pictured
above) when it
opened, Veterans now holds what was once the old Ellicott City District
and has since its 2007 opening.
The late 1960s through the 1970s saw huge growth in the number of
School aged Children in Howard County due largely to the onset of
Columbia. The 1980s however saw population loss in those high growth
areas as those homes began to house empty nesters. In some parts of
Columbia, those same Neighborhoods are just now beginning to yield
School aged children again.
In 1980 it became clear that in West Columbia and Ellicott City,
each Community had to close an Elementary School. This was a debate that
sparked during the first years of the 1980s as nobody wanted their
School to close. In west Columbia it was a toss up between Longfellow
and Faulkner Ridge Elementary. Longfellow had the smaller enrollment and
district as well as the worst floor plan in West Columbia but you know
the old saying; location location location right? In this case it meant
that Faulkner Ridge closed in 1983. Faulkner Ridge not only housed its
name sake Neighborhood but also housed Harpers Forest Apartments,
Deering Woods Condos, and Hawthorn. Deering Woods went to Longfellow as
well Beaver Brook (from Bryant Woods), Capsitrano Villas, Fenland
Fields Apartments and Hobbits Glen (from Swansfield) Harpers Forest
went to Swansfield, Hawthron went to Bryant Woods, and the Neighborhood
of Faulkner Ridge went to Running Brook. Other than Faulkner Ridge being
redistricted to Bryant Woods in 2003 these Districts haven't changed
since 1983 when Faulkner Ridge closed.
The other casualty of 1983 was Rockland Elementary. St. Johns Lane
also had very low enrollment but given its central location and the
building being in better shape, it was Rockland that closed. The entire
Rockland District was absorbed by St. Johns Lane. Pretty quickly it
became apparent that this was a mistake as St. Johns Lane became very
crowded within a few short years which would have not been so dramatic
if Rockland was still open. In fact there was talk of reopening Rockland
until Waverly opened in 1990 providing relief for St, Johns Lane.
Waverly wasn't enough and in 1997 the Community of Rockalnd got a new
School to call is own; Holliefield Station (pictured below.)
Holliefield Station's District is almost identical to that of
the old Rockland Elementary although it contains a population about 3
times the size. There isn't a single School in Ellicott City in danger
of closing now as these once low enrollment areas have had massive
population growth between now and the time Rockland closed.
Not surprisingly with two Elementary Schools having closed in 1983
there was talk of closing a Middle School in 1984. On the chopping block
were Wilde Lake Middle, Dunloggin, Ellicott City Middle, Patapsco, and
Waterloo Middle. Waterloo Middle was one of the oldest Schools in
question and had had a fire. Waterloo Middle was not well funded having
not had any real real renovations since its opening in 1955. The fire
should have made that those renovations a reality but the School Board
had a reason not to do so and as a result the fire damaged section was
sealed off and portables were used. There was talk of building a new
Middle School as a replacement on land the School Board owned on Mayfeild
Avenue but projections didn't have the need for it until 1995. Waterloo
Middle closed in 1984 and was absorbed by Ellicott City Middle which
was grossly underpopulated. Ellicott City Middle had a better location
than Waterloo Middle and wasn't damaged by a fire.
Waterloo Middle was used as a School for the rest of its life
however, first in 1985 Waterloo Elementary (2 pictures up) used as its building
underwent a Modernization. Then from 1986-1988 while the "new
Southeastern Elementary" was being built, part of Guilford used Waterloo
Middle, the Neighborhoods of Huntington and Savage went there until the
"new Southeastern Elementarily" which is now Bollman Bridge opened in
1988. Throughout the life of Waterloo Middle it was suggested that its
site was better suited for an Elementary School and the area was in need
of one. In 1988 Waterloo Middle was torn down and two years later in
1990, Deep Run Elementary (pictured above) opened on the site of Waterloo Middle. The
Waterloo Middle replacement opened the following year in 1991 on
Mayfield Avenue appropriately named Mayfield Woods Middle.
Given that Howard County Schools have seen growth pretty much every
year since Waterloo Middle closed, no other School has done so without a
replacement of the same name opening at the same time such as Elkridge (pictured above)
and Bushy Park in 1992 and 2007 respectively. Although projections
show a net incarease for the County as a whole, the western region shows
a drastic decline for the coming years. Could it be time for an
additional School to close? Stay tuned to find out.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Elkridge High: Returning After Seven Decades?
Lately I have been researching the history of Howard County's
School Buildings and blogging has gone on the back burner. It never
occurred to me until last night that my research findings could in fact
translate into some interesting blog posts. So this and future posts
will have a lot to do with School Buildings in Howard County and how
things used to be and what I predict will happen in the future. As the
title suggests this post will focus on Elkridge High School, what became
of it, and how High Schools have evolved since its closure.
The year was 1950 and Howard County was very rural consisting of a
few small towns with some stand alone Elementary Schools a few with
Junior High Schools and an even smaller number with Senior Highs.
Schools were segregated at the time and the only High School that Blacks
could go to was Harriet Tubman High. White High Schools were Lisbon
High, Ellicott City High, Savage High, Clarksville High, and Elkridge
High. A lot of these Schools had different course offerings. With
population growth on the horizon the School Board realized the need for a
large centralized High School with a streamlined course offering. The
site used for the land was and is on Old Annapolis Road just west of
Waterloo Road.The School named "Howard County High School"
(eventually shortened to Howard High) and still exists today.
| Site of the Old Clarksville High |
Perhaps discontinuing these old High Schools could have been seen
as short sighted because almost immediately after the opening of Howard
High, the need for new High Schools grew. I would assume that the closed
Schools were dated and that modernizing them to be adequate would have
cost more than building new Schools. Lisbon High, one of two surviving
"Pre Howard High Schools" was slated to be replaced by a Junior Senior
High. Glenelg Junior Senior High opened in 1957. During its first ten
years Glenelg operated as Junior High and High School until 1967 when
Glenwood Middle opened and Glenelg became solely a High School.
Mount Hebron had a similar history when it opened in 1965 as a Junior Senior High until 1969 when Patapsco opened thus allowing Mount Hebron to become solely a High School.
Mount Hebron had a similar history when it opened in 1965 as a Junior Senior High until 1969 when Patapsco opened thus allowing Mount Hebron to become solely a High School.
Remember Harriett Tubman High? In 1964 Howard County was to become
integrated and all Schools were to accept both blacks and whites.
Needless to say the "separate but equal" mentality was flawed because
all of the blacks only Schools closed the same year integration took
place. On the High School level Harriett Tubman couldn't close yet
because it had to be replaced.
The new School was located on land next to the original Harriett Tubman High and is today's Atholton High. It opened in 1966.
The new School was located on land next to the original Harriett Tubman High and is today's Atholton High. It opened in 1966.
The rapid pace at which Columbia was built called for unprecedented
amounts of School Construction. In 1971 Columbia's first High School
Wilde Lake (which I'm a 2002 graduate of) opened.
Two years later in 1973 Oakland Mills High opened. Some of Columbia's Villages were mean to have High Schools that never came to be. Haprers Choice is one of those Neighborhoods. When Centennial High opened in 1977 most of its population originally came from Harpers Choice. Centennial has since had mad massive growth in its District so much so that all of Harpers Choice has returned to Wilde Lake High. Owen Brown was also slated to have a High School of its own.
In 1976 Hammond High opened in what is now the Village of Kings Contrivance and Owen Brown occupied Hammond until more development took place around the School. Eventually all of Owen Brown was redistricted back to Oakland Mills which is a better fit considering some homes off of Cradlerock Way are within walking distance of Oakland Mills High. Some Columbia Neighborhoods were never meant to have a High School such as Hickory Ridge because Atholton is right there (though most of the Village historically has attended Wilde Lake though Hawthorn now attends Atholton and only Clarys Forest now attends now Wilde Lake) Long Reach was never meant to have a High School either because Howard is just across the street from the northern border of Long Reach's Phelps Luck Neighborhood. Dorseys Serach was also not supposed to have a High School because it's so close to Centennial High although the entire Village attends Wilde Lake.
Two years later in 1973 Oakland Mills High opened. Some of Columbia's Villages were mean to have High Schools that never came to be. Haprers Choice is one of those Neighborhoods. When Centennial High opened in 1977 most of its population originally came from Harpers Choice. Centennial has since had mad massive growth in its District so much so that all of Harpers Choice has returned to Wilde Lake High. Owen Brown was also slated to have a High School of its own.
In 1976 Hammond High opened in what is now the Village of Kings Contrivance and Owen Brown occupied Hammond until more development took place around the School. Eventually all of Owen Brown was redistricted back to Oakland Mills which is a better fit considering some homes off of Cradlerock Way are within walking distance of Oakland Mills High. Some Columbia Neighborhoods were never meant to have a High School such as Hickory Ridge because Atholton is right there (though most of the Village historically has attended Wilde Lake though Hawthorn now attends Atholton and only Clarys Forest now attends now Wilde Lake) Long Reach was never meant to have a High School either because Howard is just across the street from the northern border of Long Reach's Phelps Luck Neighborhood. Dorseys Serach was also not supposed to have a High School because it's so close to Centennial High although the entire Village attends Wilde Lake.
The 1980s saw massive growth in North Laurel located in the
southeast of Howard County. At one point there was supposed to be a High
School located in North Laurel proper to provide relief for Hammond
which was adapting to the growth from Columbia's King Contrivance
Neighborhood. The County opted not to build a High School in this
densely populated area instead they built one in Clarksville and was to
be Columbia's Final Village; River Hill. The School was built before a
single house in River Hill was completed. The school opened in 1994 as a
holding School to Wilde Lake High whose school was to be rebuilt over
the next two years and then in 1996 to its own population River Hill
swallowed what was then most of the entire District. Atholton, in need
of regaining its population became the High School for North
Laurel though students would have to travel in between the River Hill
and Hammond High Districts each day to get to Atholton.
In 1996 in addition to River Hill opening to its own district and
Wilde Lake opening to its new building Long Reach High (pictured above) opened. Wait a
minute! Didn't I just say that Long Reach was one of the Villages on
Columbia that did NOT have a High School site? I did and I stand by that
claim. It seems that our School System was being cheap. The preferred
location for this School was to be in Elkridge where Howard High feeling
its recent population boom. The School System owned land in Long Reach
just past the Village Center that the Rouse Company gave to them for a
Middle School. Long Reach Middle was never built as the County preferred
to build Mayfield Woods and Bonnie Branch both of which serve parts of
Long Reach. So the vacant site reserved for a Middle School wasn't
needed at that time (it is now that's my preferred area for Middle
School #20) so it became a High School. Seeing how close it is to Howard
there are parts of Long Reach that are very close to both Schools and
parts of Elkridge that aren't close to either and it's a shot in the
dark whether or not their districted School be it Long Reach or Howard
is the one their home is closer to.
Back in the southern portion of the County it's time that another
High School be built for a 2002 opening. Yet again the County opted not
to build a School in North Laurel and used a sparsely populated site
that nobody could walk to. This time it was in Fulton which would
relieve crowding at River Hill, Atholton, and Hammond High. There was
redistricting in many other High Schools as well but this new High
School named Reservoir took its district from these three Schools mainly
Atholton. Atholton then took from Hammond, Wilde Lake, and River
Hill to yet again refill its district. It seems that North Laurel will
never get a High School of its own which will reduce transportation
costs. In 2005 Marriotts Ridge High (pictured below) opened in the
Marriottsville/Woodstock/West Friendship area drawing its district from
Mount Hebron, Glenelg, River Hill, and Centennial.
Now here we are in 2012 on the eve of Howard High's 60th
Anniversary, 60 years since all those old High Schools including
Elkridge were closed. I felt that I had to provide a history of the High
Schools that opened in between now and then to show everything comes
full circle. Although those old High Schools closed in favor of one
large centralized High School it seems that within 45 years all of those
High Schools were replaced, that is except Elkridge High. Lets go over
the list, Glenelg High replaced Lisbon High, River Hill High replaced
Clarksville High, Centennial and Mount Hebron replaced Ellicott City
High, and Hammond more or less replaced Savage High. The argument could
be made that Long Reach replaced Elkridge High but projections indicate
that both Howard and Long Reach will be very crowded by the year 2020.
Long Reach in past years has been open to accept students from Howard
when it became too crowded but in a few short years Long Reach itself
will be too crowded. Now should the County build another High School
near Howard and Long Reach like they did with Reservoir being so close
to River Hill and Atholton? NO! Those same projections show River Hill
to be UNDER crowded and it appears that redistricting will have to take
place to balance the numbers out but that will mean moving students who
live much loser to other High Schools.
This means that this new High School will have to be further away
from Howard and Long Reach yet still in an area that is growing rapidly,
and what area fits the bill perfectly? Elkridge! Elkridge High must
open in order to provide relief for Howard and Long Reach and perhaps
even Hammond without being too close to any other School. The Elkridge
area is just like North Laurel in that it's densely populated but all
High School Students must take a long bus ride to their respective
Schools. Unlike North Laurel this can be corrected because the need for
another High School will present itself within the next few years. I'm
thinking that the year 2022 should be the projected opening date for the
new Elkridge to make it exactly 70 years after the old School
closed and Howard opened. I think that will be a perfect fit for
Elkridge to have it open 70 years later rather than 71 years or 67
plus years I like the even number of 70 as almost a celebration of all
that's happened in that amount of time. I have the perfect site for
Elkridge High as well; Troy Hill Park and Mansion. I don't usually
support using park land for a School but I don't know of another site
that's large enough in the Elkridge area not slated for development. The
County owns this land as well so site acquisition funds won't be
required.
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