James Monroe High School (New York City)
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James Monroe High School is a former comprehensive high school located at 1300 Boynton Avenue at East 172nd Street in the Soundview section of the Bronx, New York City.
Opened in 1924, the original school ran for seventy years before being shut down in 1997 for poor performance. The original building now houses seven smaller high schools: the Monroe Academy for Visual Arts and Design (H.S. 692), the Monroe Academy for Business and Law (H.S. 690), the High School of World Cultures (H.S. 550), The Metropolitan Soundview Highschool (X521), Pan American International High School (X388), Mott Hall V (X242) and the newly opened Cinema School (first opened its doors for the 2009–2010 school year). The building also used to house an elementary school, The Bronx Little School.
The building was designed by William H. Gompert, who was the New York City Superintendent of School Buildings. The building was built by the T.A. Clarke Co., and is substantially identical to a handful of other high school buildings that were built in the city at the same time.
Notable alumni[edit]
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (January 2021) |
- Danny Aiello, actor, who attended Monroe for two weeks before dropping out to enlist in National Guard
- Saul Bass, graphic designer, movie title sequence designer, and filmmaker
- Edward J. Bloustein, 17th president of Rutgers University
- Milton Cardona ('63), musician who recorded with Willie Colon, Hector Lavoe and Tito Puente
- Darren Carrington ('84), 8-year NFL player (Broncos, Lions, Chargers, Panthers), played in two Super Bowls
- Cornelius H. Charlton, U.S. Army soldier and Medal of Honor recipient in Korean War
- Judy Craig, Patricia Bennett, and Barbara Lee of singing group the Chiffons
- Larry Eisenberg, biomedical engineer, science fiction writer and limericist
- Jules Feiffer (‘47), cartoonist for Village Voice (won Pulitzer Prize in editorial cartooning); author, playwright and screenwriter
- Paul A. Fino, GOP Congressman and State Senator, representing the Bronx
- Art Fleming ('41), original host of TV's Jeopardy! and former Monroe football star
- Anna Gajar, Professor Emeritus at Pennsylvania State University[citation needed]
- Stan Getz, jazz saxophonist
- Nathan Glazer, sociologist who co-authored Beyond the Melting Pot
- Izzy Goldstein, Major League Baseball player
- Hank Greenberg ('29), Major League Baseball player with Detroit Tigers, 2-time American League MVP and Hall of Famer; led Monroe to PSAL basketball championship in 1927 and PSAL baseball title in 1929, three-sport All-City selection in soccer, basketball and baseball
- Lenny Hambro, jazz musician (woodwinds), notably with bands of Gene Krupa, Glenn Miller, Machito, and Chico O'Farrill
- Jonathan Harris ('31), actor
- Robert Johnson, first Black American to serve as the Bronx County District Attorney (January 1, 1989) in history of New York State; in 2005, he became longest-serving District Attorney in Bronx County history; Monroe graduate and U.S. Navy veteran
- Herbert E. Klarman ('35), American public health economist
- Martin J. Klein ('39), historian of modern physics and senior editor of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein (Princeton University Press) from 1988 to 1998; first winner (2005) of Abraham Pais Prize, first major award for history of physics[1]
- Karen Koslowitz, New York City Council member representing Queens
- Ed Kranepool ('62), Major League Baseball player, signed by New York Mets just days after his 1962 graduation from Monroe, one of 1962 Mets and member of 1969 World Series champions
- Leon M. Lederman ('39), Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1988
- Samuel Lubell, public opinion pollster, journalist, and National Book Award for Nonfiction finalist (1957)
- Juliet Man Ray, dancer and model, wife and muse of artist Man Ray[2]
- Judith Merril, science-fiction author and editor
- Stanley Milgram, social psychologist
- Dan Monzon ('64), baseball infielder, manager and scout
- Malloy Nesmith, Sr ('88), streetball player
- Estelle Reiner ('32), actor and singer
- Regina Resnik, opera singer and actor
- Ellie Rodríguez ('64), former Major League Baseball player
- Lennie Rosenbluth ('52), college and NBA basketball player
- Mickey Rutner, Major League Baseball player
- Nancy Savoca, Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Award-winning filmmaker
- Paul R. Screvane, politician
- Art Shay ('39), photographer and writer
- Robert Strauss, actor, Academy Award-nominated for role in Stalag 17
- Anthony Velonis, WPA artist who helped introduce silkscreen printing to mainstream as fine art form
- Cora Walker, one of first black women to practice law in New York[3]
- Doris Wishman, filmmaker
- Wilbur Young ('67), former defensive lineman in National Football League
- Philip Zimbardo, social psychologist
References[edit]
- ^ Hevesi, Dennis (2 April 2009). "Martin J. Klein, Historian of Physics, Dies at 84". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-03-13.
- ^ Flint, Peter B (21 January 1991). "Juliet Man Ray, 79, The Artist's Model And Muse, Is Dead". New York Times. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
- ^ Fox, Margalit (2006-07-20). "Cora Walker, 84, Dies; Lawyer Who Broke Racial Ground". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-03-23.