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Manual High School was founded to be a different kind of school from the very beginning. Featured in these photographs are James B. Grant, to-be Governor of the state of Colorado and Chester S. Morey, to-be Denver Public Schools board member, two of the original creators of Manual.
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Manual Training High School was created to train the 110 scholars to be career ready. Many of the founding teachers and leaders had ties to Denver East High School.
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The first graduates from Manual Training High School complete their high school requirements (some members of the class featured in the photograph).
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Five members of the class of 1933 from Manual Training School fight with the Tuskegee Airmen in World War II.
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The word "training" is voted to be dropped from the name of Manual Training High School.
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The old Manual building was burned to the ground and was rebuilt the following year.
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Manual High School is rebuilt after a thee alarm fire burned it down earlier the same year. This building is still home to Manual today.
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The T-Bolts were undefeated in their 1966 season and were inducted into the CHSAA Hall of Fame in 2014
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The U.S. Supreme Court demanded that DPS desegrate its schools by busing upper-middle-class, predominantly white students from the suburbs to Manual High School in its decision in Keyes vs. School District 1.
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74 people were killed in gang-related violence during the summer of 1993. Much of this violence was centered in Northeast Denver and in the Manual community.
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1994 Graduation Fight Only six of Manual's African-American male students walked at graduation this year. A fight broke out on stage during the ceremony between two students around the tensions that had been building around the inequities for African American students at Manual for years.
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Even though Denver's schools were more segregated than ever, a federal judge allows DPS to lift the forced busing requirements and return to a system of neighborhood schools.
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Friends of Manual is founded to give a voice to the community in the conversation around Manual High School. FOM also organizes monetary community support and is a strong supporter of the reforms currently underway at Manual High School.
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Gentrification in the Whittier and Five Points neighborhoods begins to creep in, grealty increasing over the subsequent decade.
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Inspired by the closure of Manual High School in 2006, Project Voyce begins to empower students to have a strong voice in their educations and communities.
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During the three years that Rob Stein was the leader of Manual, student test scores nearly doubled and enrollments increased exponentially.
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The first graduating class to attend the newly opened Manual High School graduates in May 2010.
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Brian Dale was selected to take over Manual after Rob Stein left in 2010. Dale brought a focus on social justice and expeditionary learning experiences. He was asked to step down midyear in 2014.
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In an effort to create a sustainable plan for success at Manual High School, the district convenes a Manual Thought Partner group consisting of community members, parents, students, and district representatives.
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The district proposes combining East High School and Manual to address overcrowding at East and low enrollment at Manual. Manual would host all 9th graders and run a 9th grade academy year while 10th, 11th, and 12th graders would attend East. This proposal is met with outrage.
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Discussions begin in the community and the district around what to do to improve enrollment at Manual High School. Several middle schools begin to draft proposals to expand into the Manual campus, including McAuliffe International School.
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After a rigorous selection process through DPS and with community input, Nick Dawkins is hired as the new leader for Manual High School.