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2,588. Teachers. 165. Mason County Schools is a public school district headquartered in Maysville, Kentucky. The district serves the rural area of Mason County, Kentucky with a population of approximately 17,150 in 2018. In 1990 the Maysville Independent School District merged into the Mason County school district. [1]
Mason County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky. As of the 2020 census, the population was 17,120. [1] Its county seat is Maysville. [2] The county was created from Bourbon County, Virginia in 1788 and named for George Mason, a Virginia delegate to the U.S. Constitutional Convention known as the "Father of the Bill of Rights".
This is a list of school districts in Kentucky, which has two types of public school districts. The first type, county school districts, typically cover all or a large part of a county, and are generally styled "XXXX County (Public) Schools." The second type, "independent" districts, usually encompass cities or groups of cities.
May's Lick Negro School. May's Lick Negro School. March 5, 2018. ( #100002160) 5003 Raymond Rd. 38°31′05″N 83°50′19″W. / 38.51817°N 83.83848°W / 38.51817; -83.83848 ( May's Lick Negro School) Mays Lick. Rosenwald School which served black students from 1921 to 1960, when school segregation was ended.
An effort to put “school choice” on the November ballot has cleared its first legislative hurdle. Majority Caucus Chair Suzanne Miles, R-Owensboro, sponsored House Bill 2, which would give ...
District 8: Alan Short, Lawrence County Undefeated regular seasons: David Clark, Bardstown; Hunter Cantwell, Christian Academy-Louisville; Derek Johns, Union County; Joseph Wynn, Mason County
Mays Lick Consolidated School. / 38.522778; -83.836806. The Mays Lick Consolidated School was the first high school in Mason County, Kentucky. It was built in May's Lick, Kentucky to serve students from seven separate lower schools. It is an 88 by 63 feet (27 m × 19 m) two-story brick building facing northwest. [2]
Mason County: John Fleming (1735–91), frontiersman and one of the county's original settlers 15,442: 351 sq mi (909 km 2) Floyd County: 071: Prestonsburg: 1800: Fleming County, Montgomery County, and Mason County: John Floyd (1750–83), surveyor and pioneer 34,423: 394 sq mi (1,020 km 2) Franklin County: 073: Frankfort: 1794