Normandy started a high school at Lincoln Elementary School in Pagedale early its history but it did not last beyond a year. In 1907 a high school was started in the former Washington Elementary School on St. Charles Rock Road, but only one class graduated when the school closed in 1911.[2] In 1923, the district again opened a school, this time on property purchased from the Eden Theological Seminary.[2] For its first year, the high school shared the ornate four-story main building with Eden students.[2] Plans by William B. Ittner for a California-style collegiate campus with a central quadrangle were implemented shortly after.[citation needed] The school opened as a combined junior high school and senior high school, with six levels from 7th through 12th grades.[2] Plans also called for adding the first two years of college.[citation needed] This plan was realized in a way forty years later with the opening of the Normandy Residence Center, which became the University of Missouri-St. Louis.[citation needed] A vocational building and gymnasium, also designed by Ittner, were added in 1929.[2] The vocational building remains as West Hall.[citation needed] The gymnasium, with curved, amphitheater-style seating, was renowned in the area for its architecture.[2]
The founders of the high school had the goal of creating the "ideal high school".[citation needed] The founders embraced an educational concept called "functional education," which meant educating young people to assume their place in the democracy as intelligent, educated, civically involved, ethical people.[citation needed] The curriculum was based]]'s beliefs in learning by doing and relating the school to the community outside the school and, furthermore, making the school the center of the community.[citation needed] Lectures and tests based on student feeding the lectures back to the teacher were bypassed for hands-on projects, panel discussions, research projects and experiences outside the school.[citation needed] Normandy High was a so-called "lighthouse" school, with its programs the subject of numerous articles in The School Review and other educators' publications and of panels at high-profile places such as the University of Chicago.[citation needed]
Several changes to the original layout of the school were made during the 1940s and 1950s. The Garage, erected in the 1940s with a bus garage below and classrooms above, remains as North Hall.[citation needed] The school opened one of the first St. Louis County high school pools in 1948.[2] Due to large enrollment, a separate junior high school was planned and built in 1949; however, a fire damaged the original junior high school building that year, and while construction was ongoing on the new building, classes were held in two sessions a day.[2] Prior to the 1950s, the campus also included a large lake and forest area, and the school retained faculty residences inherited from Eden in which the Normandy School District superintendent and some teachers lived.[citation needed] The original seminary building was replaced by Central Hall in 1959; the large, Ittner-designed gymnasium was demolished and replaced by the circular Viking Hall.[citation needed]
Community
The school serves 24 separate municipalities in St. Louis County including unincorporated areas.[citation needed] The district encompasses an economically depressed region of St. Louis County including industrial areas such as iron works and scrapyards. The municipalities served are:
For the 2013–2014 school year, the school offered 17 activities approved by the Missouri State High School Activities Association (MSHSAA): baseball, boys and girls basketball, sideline cheerleading, boys and girls cross country, dance team, 11-man football, music activities, girls soccer, softball, speech and debate, girls swimming and diving, boys and girls track and field, girls volleyball, and wrestling.[3] In addition to its current activities, Normandy students have won several state championships, including:
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(April 2019)