Southwest Magnet High School
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Southwest_Magnet_High_School an entity of type: Thing
Southwest Magnet High School, also known as Southwest-Macon and Southwest Magnet High School and Law Academy, is a high school in Macon, Georgia, United States, serving students in grades 9–12. It is a unit of the Bibb County School System. In the late 1980s, because of growing concerns about successful management of the enormous student body, the school was split into Southwest High School and Southeast High School. Southwest later added a magnet program, focusing on preparatory curricula for law and criminal justice careers.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Southwest Magnet High School
rdf:langString
Southwest Magnet High School
rdf:langString
Southwest Magnet High School
xsd:float
32.80583953857422
xsd:float
-83.67363739013672
xsd:integer
2569492
xsd:integer
1121422819
xsd:double
49.2
xsd:integer
31206
xsd:integer
1775
rdf:langString
Macon
rdf:langString
United States
xsd:double
17.76
rdf:langString
Georgia
xsd:string
32.80584 -83.673635
rdf:langString
Patriots
rdf:langString
Southwest Magnet High School, also known as Southwest-Macon and Southwest Magnet High School and Law Academy, is a high school in Macon, Georgia, United States, serving students in grades 9–12. It is a unit of the Bibb County School System. In the 1970s, Macon residents often claimed that Southwest was the largest high school in the United States in both campus size and attendance numbers. Its sprawling campus complex comprised four classroom buildings (McEvoy A, McEvoy B, Willingham A, Willingham B), three of which had their own gymnasium. It had its own baseball field, 1/4 mile track, soccer field, and football field. A fifth building was added in the 1980s to accommodate technical education needs. Southwest High School was born out of the integration and co-ed movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s, during which the Alfred R. Willingham High School for Boys, the adjacent Margaret McEvoy High School for Girls, and nearby all-black Ballard-Hudson High School merged, and eventually rose to national prominence under the leadership of complex principals W. C. Whitley and Gloria Washington. After the merger, the campuses formerly used for Ballard-Hudson High School were converted to junior high campuses (grades 8-9) with the Ballard-Hudson name. Its large student body enabled the school to have successful teams in baseball, track and field, football and basketball, as well as numerous academic teams. Its chief rival was Central High School's Chargers. Each fall, the campus hosted Orange Crush week, designed to celebrate the upcoming game between the Southwest Patriots and the Central Chargers. Now their rival is the Northeast Magnet High School's Raiders. In the late 1980s, because of growing concerns about successful management of the enormous student body, the school was split into Southwest High School and Southeast High School. Southwest later added a magnet program, focusing on preparatory curricula for law and criminal justice careers. Prior to the school's split, Southwest High School produced NBA basketball greats Norm Nixon (#10 Los Angeles Lakers 1977-83), Jeff Malone (Miami Heat, Philadelphia 76ers, and Washington Bullets 1983-90). The school was also nationally known for its marching band, "The Southwest Marching Patriots Band," or the "Big Red Machine," and its concert and jazz bands, all of which succeeded under the direction of Bill Hunter and Oscar Jackson.
xsd:integer
874
xsd:integer
9
rdf:langString
A. Bernard Young
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
49
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
874
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
6903
rdf:langString
1775 Williamson Road
xsd:string
31206
rdf:langString
Patriots
<Geometry>
POINT(-83.673637390137 32.805839538574)