History of LaGrange
In 1903 Mesant LaGrange donated one acre for a one-room school building
on Ryan Street. By 1913, the school had become so overcrowded that he donated
an additional nine acres of land on which a four-room wooden school building
was constructed. Because the School Board wanted to ensure their ownership,
however, Mesant LaGrange agreed to accept $1000 as a "selling price"
for the land. This wooden building was moved around on the site and remodeled
several times until it was finally demolished in 1989.
In April, 1928, the Calcasieu Parish School Board announced plans to build
a new high school which was completed in 1929 at a cost of $90,000. Leslie
Norton was appointed principal. Only two weeks before graduation in 1931,
tragedy struck when a fire believed to have been started in the chemical
laboratory on the second floor caused the building to burn. Central station
firemen went to the blaze, but they were unable to fight the flames since
the school was nearly two miles south of the city limits and no fire plug
connections were available. Shortly after, the school was rebuilt exactly
as it was before the fire.
LaGrange Senior High School opened its current facility on September 07,
1954, even though construction was still in the final stages. The freshman
class was left at the old facility in what then
became LaGrange Junior High School. Mr. John J. Mims was the first principal
of the new high school.
By the time the school plant, including the building, stadium, and furniture,
was completed, the cost was $1,203,928. The building had a 1000-student
capacity and included thirty classrooms plus a commerce and manual arts
department, a home economics facility, stage room for speech activities,
a workshop for LaGator (the school's first publication), science
labs, a photography dark room, practice rooms for band and vocal music,
a cafeteria, a 10,000 volume capacity library, and a "modern"
gymnasium. At that time, LaGrange was the only "senior" high
school in the Southwest Louisiana area operated under the Calcasieu Parish
school system.
In 1970 with LaGrange's population beyond two thousand students, the School
Board began planning for the construction of an additional high school
in south Lake Charles which opened in 1971. At the end of the school year
in 1973, Mr. Mims retired, and Assistant Principal Pete Crawford was named
principal of LaGrange. In 1981 Mr. Philip Perry became principal followed
by our current principal, Jimmy D. Anderson, who took the reigns in 1986.
Although several minor renovations have taken place on the site since its
beginning in 1954, LaGrange High School underwent notable refurbishment
as well as new construction with the passage of a bond issue in 1990. As
a result, the plant now boasts a state-of-the-art science wing, an enclosed
courtyard, improved athletic facilities and auditorium, and a new home
economics department among other renovations.
In addition, LaGrange now has the advantage of technology as a learning
tool for the nineties and beyond with a television in each classroom, two
Macintosh writing labs, an automated library system In addition, LaGrange
now has the advantage of technology as a learning tool for the nineties
and beyond with a television in each classroom, two Macintosh writing labs,
an automated library system with remote access and CD-ROM references, and
four IBM labs for business and computer science.
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