Chappaqua Central School District

Chappaqua Central School District
Address
66 Roaring Brook Road, Chappaqua, NY 10514
Information
School type State, National, Public
Founded 1928
Superintendent Dr. Eric Byrne (Interim)
Grades K12
Number of students ~4700
Average class size 20
Student to teacher ratio 11.6
Language English
Budget $114,828,088 (2013-2014)
Tuition None
Communities served New Castle, New York, parts of Mt. Kisco, New York, Pleasantville, New York
Website http://www.ccsd.ws/

The Chappaqua Central School District is a K-12 public school district serving students in Chappaqua, New York, and Millwood, New York, as well as small parts of Pleasantville, New York, and Mount Kisco, New York. The acting interim superintendent of schools is Dr. Eric Byrne, following the resignation/retirement of Lyn McKay following protests and outcry after the Christopher Schraufnagel sex-abuse case.[1][2] The Chappaqua Central School District is 26th Best School District in the United States making housing expensive.[3]

Schools and administrators

Superintendent and Cabinet

Position Name
Superintendent of Schools Eric Byrne (Interim)
Deputy Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction Eric Byrne
Deputy Superintendent for Human Resources & Leadership Development
Deputy Superintendent for Business John Chow
Director of Special Education & Related Services Heidi McCarthy
Director of Educational Technology Darleen Nicolosi

Board of Education

As of August 2012:

Committee on Special Education

Schools

Elementary

Douglas G. Grafflin Elementary School

Roaring Brook Elementary School

Westorchard Elementary School

Middle schools

Robert E. Bell Middle School

Seven Bridges Middle School

High school

Horace Greeley High School

Former Schools

All of these schools with the exception of the King Street School operated from 1931-1951 were one-room schoolhouses that were merged.

Real Estate

According to the New York Times, homes in the district had a mean sale price of $966,000 in 2014; which was a significant increase from $892,000 in 2013 and $844,000 in 2010. Homes mostly vary from $525,000-$25,000,000 and the district's mean sale price was at its highest in 2007 at $1,278,000 - just before the housing market crashed. The lowest recorded mean sale price was in 2008 at $822,000.[4]

History

Before the school district was officially chartered, one-room schoolhouses devoid of windows were prevalent. The school districts began merging into what was then known as Rural School District No. 4 of the Towns of New Castle & Mount Pleasant which became the Chappaqua Central School District. The Chappaqua Central School District, pursuant to Education Law, merged to what was then known as Chappaqua School District No. 4 completely by 1927. In need of larger facilities, construction on Horace Greeley School, named for Horace Greeley, a prominent statesman and news publisher that lived in town, began that same year. The building was designed and built by John Borup, as indicated on a plaque outside the entrance by the Auditorium. Construction finished in 1928, and the school opened that September as a grade 1-12 school. In 1937, the Public Works Administration completed an addition including a new gymnasium, and designed by the firm of Tooker & Marsh and built by Wintour J. Hackett & Co. The district principal at the time was Dr. Robert E. Bell, for whom Bell Middle School is now named. Douglas G. Grafflin, for whom the Grafflin School was named, was Bell's successor as district principal.

In 1951, Roaring Brook Elementary School, which at the time was a one-room schoolhouse, was enlarged into its current building in 1951 and became part of the school district. In 1957, Horace Greeley School moved to its current location at 70 Roaring Brook Road, now as Horace Greeley High School, with the district headquarters moved next door to 66 Roaring Brook Road. The former Horace Greeley School was enlarged and turned into Robert E. Bell Middle School. In 1962, Douglas G. Grafflin Elementary School was finished, and opened its doors that September. In 1971, Westorchard Elementary School was built and opened on a parcel near West Orchard Road. This ended the Chappaqua Central School District's expansion for 32 years.

For a period in the late 1950s, kindergarten and fifth grade classes for the district were housed in J Building at Horace Greeley High School due to overcrowding, which prompted an addition at Roaring Brook and the construction of Douglas Grafflin Elementary School in 1962. For a brief period in the 1970s, there was no room at Roaring Brook Elementary School for kindergarten or fifth grade classes. This was partially alleviated with the construction of Westorchard Elementary School in 1971. In 1974, an addition was hastily erected at Westorchard. In 1973, the district rented the St. John & St. Mary Parish School, which had closed a year earlier, and the building housed fifth grade classes. J Building at Greeley also housed classes. In 1975, "temporary" portable trailers were erected at Roaring Brook Elementary School which housed Roaring Brook's kindergarten classes until 2002.

In 2001, ground was broken on Seven Bridges Middle School, which was built in order to alleviate overcrowding at the town's only middle school, Robert E. Bell Middle School.

In 2002, to address overcrowding, an addition of a new wing for the kindergarten classes was added to Roaring Brook, and the rapidly decaying portables were demolished. In June 2003, Seven Bridges was finished, dedicated in August, and opened its doors to its first students that September. Fifth grade students were then moved to the middle school to help overcrowding at the district's three elementary schools.

Controversy

In 2015, Horace Greeley High School drama teacher Christopher Schraufnagel resigned[5] and was charged with the sexual abuse of three 15-year-old students.[6] All crimes were alleged to have occurred between 2011 and 2015 on campus. The parents of the three students subsequently filed a lawsuit against the school district.[7] The district's reply to the lawsuit claimed the students' "carelessness" and "recklessness" were partly to blame.[8]

References

External links

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