John Marshall High School

There are several high schools in the United States named after the early United States politician and Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall, including:

  • John Marshall High School (Los Angeles) in the Los Angeles Unified School District of Los Angeles, California
  • John Marshall High School (Minnesota) in Rochester, Minnesota
  • John Marshall High School (New York) in Rochester, New York
  • John Marshall High School (Cleveland, Ohio) in Cleveland, Ohio
  • John Marshall High School (Leon Valley, Texas) in Leon Valley, Texas (San Antonio address)
  • John Marshall High School (Oklahoma) in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • John Marshall High School (Minnesota) in the Independent School District #535 of Rochester, Minnesota
  • John Marshall High School (Indiana) in Indianapolis, Indiana (Closed in 1986, reopened in 2008)
  • John Marshall High School (West Virginia) in Glen Dale, West Virginia, serving most of Marshall County
  • John Marshall High School (Wisconsin) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • John Marshall Metropolitan High School, in Chicago, Illinois

JMHS may also refer to one of many high schools named after James Madison, including:

  • James Madison High School (Fairfax County, Virginia) in Vienna, Virginia

Famous quotes containing the words john, marshall, high and/or school:

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    That dying chose the living world for text
    And never could have rested in the tomb
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    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)

    If parents award freedom regardless of whether their children have demonstrated an ability to handle it, children never learn to see a clear link between responsible behavior and adult privileges.
    —Melinda M. Marshall (20th century)

    I have the high Satisfaction of beholding all Nature with an unprejudiced Eye.
    Richard Steele (1672–1729)

    We are all adult learners. Most of us have learned a good deal more out of school than in it. We have learned from our families, our work, our friends. We have learned from problems resolved and tasks achieved but also from mistakes confronted and illusions unmasked. . . . Some of what we have learned is trivial: some has changed our lives forever.
    Laurent A. Daloz (20th century)