Abraham Lincoln High School (Brooklyn)
Abraham Lincoln High School is a public high school located at 2800 Ocean Parkway, in Brooklyn, New York, United States, under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Education. The school was built in 1929, and since graduated three Nobel Prize laureates, as well as many doctors, scientists, engineers, politicians, musicians, artists, and other notable alumni. The current principal is Ari A. Hoogenboom.
It was built during the Great Depression, and in order to save money, one set of blueprints was used for Lincoln and other high schools in New York City, including Bayside High School, Samuel J. Tilden High School, John Adams High School, and Grover Cleveland High School.
The school features five gymnasiums, an outdoor football and track and field. a swimming pool, a photography studio, an animal science lab, an office classroom and an auditorium.
History
The school was established in 1929, and named for former US president, Abraham Lincoln. From when the school opened its doors in September 1930 through the next 25 years, the school principal was Dr. Gabriel R. Mason. In 1983, Dr. Jack Pollock, the principal at the time, reported that 8 of 10 graduates went on to attend college and/or university.However, by 2010, C.J. Hughes of The New York Times reported that Lincoln High School had "struggled" with student academic achievement. In 2009, the school only had a 58% graduation rating. The SAT averages for the school were 411 in reading, 432 in mathematics, and 401 in writing. The New York State averages during that year were 480 in reading, 500 in mathematics, and 470 in writing.
Programs and activities
Virtual Enterprise
The school has a virtual enterprise program where students create and manage their virtual businesses from product development, production and distribution to marketing, sales, human resources, accounting, finance and web design.Veterinary science
The school has a veterinary science program where students work with live animals.Athletics
The school offers a variety of varsity and junior varsity sports. These sports include Basketball, Baseball, Football, Bowling, Cross Country, Handball, Track and field, Lacrosse, Soccer, Softball, Swimming, Tennis and Volleyball. Lincoln varsity sports games were also televised on City Gridiron.In 2013, borough president Marty Markowitz and councilman Domenic Recchia funded a new $2 million fitness center at the school. On November 27, 2018, the school along with alumnus Isaiah Whitehead commenced the opening of a new weight room.
Lincoln athletic director Renan Ebeid was recognized by All-Stars Teachers contest by Major League Baseball.
Photography
The school has a renowned professional photography program.Extracurricular activities
The school offers many extracurricular activities, including Acting Studio, Animal Care Squad, Anime, Arista National Honor Society, Cheerleading, Chess, Chinese, Conflict Negotiation and Mediation, Debate Team, ELL Acting Studio, Gay–straight alliance, Guitar, Hiking, History, Key Club, Landmark Yearbook, Library Squad, Lincoln Ambassadors, Lincoln Log Newspaper, Marine Lab Squad, South Asian club, Student Organization and Weightlifting.Student demographics
As of the 2014-15 school year, the school had an enrollment of 2,325 students and 116.0 classroom teachers, for a student–teacher ratio of 20.0:1. There were 1,506 students eligible for free lunch and 85 eligible for reduced-cost lunch.The school's racial composition is very diverse. African American students made up 38.3% of the school's student population, a plurality of the student body. White students made up over one-quarter, Hispanic and Latino students made up over one-fifth, Asian American students made up 14.0%, and Native Americans made up the remaining 0.3%.
Notable alumni
- Marv Albert, class of 1959, television sportscaster.
- Ken Auletta, class of 1960, author.
- Eddie Antar, former businessman/owner of Crazy Eddie.
- Francine Beers, class of 1942, stage, film and television actress.
- Richard Bellman, class of 1937, applied mathematician and control theorist who invented dynamic programming in 1953.
- Paul Berg, class of 1943, recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- Haylynn Cohen, fashion model
- Herbert Cohen, Olympic fencer
- Bernard Cornfeld, businessman and international financier.
- Seymour Chwast, class of 1949, graphic designer and illustrator
- Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, class of 1959, graphic designer, artist and educator
- Millie Deegan, professional baseball player in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
- Neil Diamond, class of 1958, singer/performer
- Pete Emelianchik, class of 1960, football player, NFL, Philadelphia Eagles
- Gene Federico, class of 1936, graphic designer
- Nelson Figueroa, class of 1992, major league pitcher, MLB, Houston Astros
- John Forsythe, class of 1934, film and television actor.
- Frank Frazetta, artist.
- Maksim Gelman, spree killer.
- Shirley Gorelick, figurative painter, sculptor, and printmaker
- Louis Gossett, Jr., class of 1954, basketball player, Academy Award-winning actor.
- Howard Greenfield songwriter.
- Michael Greif, class of 1978; 4-time tony nominated theatrical director
- David S. Guzick, class of 1969. Dean of the University of Rochester School of Medicine, President of the University of Florida Health System, Member of the Institute of Medicine
- Joseph Heller, class of 1942, author of Catch-22.
- Leona Helmsley, real-estate businesswoman, noted hotelier and "Queen of Mean".
- Raul Hilberg, class of 1942, historian of genocide.
- Elizabeth Holtzman, class of 1958, Democratic congresswoman, the youngest woman elected to serve in the United States House of Representatives
- Jerome Karle, class of 1933, recipient of the 1985 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- Harvey Keitel, stage, film and television actor.
- Arthur Kornberg, class of 1933, recipient of the 1959 Nobel Prize in Medicine.
- Mort Künstler, artist
- Jack Laub, professional basketball player and pharmaceutical executive
- Jay Maisel, photographer
- Herbie Mann, jazz flutist.
- Wallace Markfield, class of 1943, comic novelist.
- Stephon Marbury, class of 1995, professional basketball player.
- Lee Mazzilli, class of 1973, 1986 World Champion major league baseball player, manager and coach
- Hank Medress, singer in the group The Tokens, best known for The Lion Sleeps Tonight
- Arthur Miller, class of 1932, author, playwright and screenwriter ; Marilyn Monroe's third husband.
- Arthur R. Miller, class of 1951, CBE, Harvard Law School professor, television personality
- Larry Namer, class of 1966, Founder of E! TV network
- Dave Newmark, professional basketball player
- Irving Penn, photographer
- Bertram L. Podell, politician
- Ronald Ribman, class of 1950, author, poet, and playwright
- Buddy Rich, jazz drummer and bandleader
- Saul Rogovin, major league pitcher
- Jack M. Sasson, Professor of Jewish Studies and Hebrew Bible, and of Classics
- Neil Sedaka, class of 1956, pop singer, pianist and songwriter.
- Mort Shuman, singer, pianist, and songwriter
- David Sidikman, lawyer and politician
- Jonathan Sperber, class of 1969, European historian and biographer of Karl Marx.
- Alex Steinweiss, class of 1934, graphic designer and inventor of the album cover
- Lance Stephenson, class of 2009, professional basketball player
- Louis Stettner,, class of 1939; photographer noted for his pictures of "everyday people doing ordinary things" in both New York City and Paris.
- Frank Tarloff, class of 1932, Academy Award-winning screenwriter.
- Sebastian Telfair, class of 2004, professional basketball player.
- Natalie Arras Tepper, artist
- Arthur Tress, class of 1958, surrealist photographer.
- Sherry Turkle, class of 1965, Abby Rockefeller Mauzé Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology at MIT.
- Meryl Vladimer, class of 1969, noted theatrical producer.
- Jack B. Weinstein, class of 1939, Brooklyn federal district court judge.
- Dallas Williams, MLB player and coach.
- Isaiah Whitehead, class of 2014, professional basketball player formerly played for the Brooklyn Nets
- Stephen Yagman, civil rights lawyer.
- Peter Zimroth, American attorney and court-appointed monitor of the NYPD’s policies and practices regarding stop-and-frisk.
Fictional alumni
- Jesus Shuttlesworth, from the Spike Lee film He Got Game was the #1 high school basketball recruit playing for Lincoln HS.
- Francis Ethelbert Sharkey, a character from the Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea television series said to have received an "A" in Home Economics from Abraham Lincoln High School.