Martin Van Buren High School


Martin Van Buren High School is a public high school in Queens Village, New York. The school is operated by the New York City Department of Education.

Academics

The high school is accredited by the New York State Board of Regents. Of the school's graduates, 90% enroll in college.
Students may take a pre-med sequence of classes, a pre-engineering sequence of classes, or a law and forensics sequence of classes.
The school offers Advanced Placement classes in biology, calculus, English language, English literature, environmental science, Spanish, U.S. history, and world history. Students can take college-level courses on campus in government, economics, and algebra, and they can take classes at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Queensborough Community College, and York College.
The New York State Department of Education had given Priority School status to Van Buren High School because of low graduation rates and low scores on state testing. On December 1, 2017, Van Buren High School was removed from Priority School status because its four-year graduation rates had increased.

Demographics

There are 1,157 students enrolled at Martin Van Buren High School. Of the students, 49% are black, 27% are Asian, 18% are Latino, 9% are white, 9% are American Indian, and 2% are Pacific Islander. Students come from more than twenty countries.

History

In 1952, the New York City Board of Education approved the construction of a new high school at 229th Street and Hillside Avenue. Queens Village's population had greatly increased, and the school was needed to reduce overcrowding at Jamaica High School, Bayside High School, and Andrew Jackson High School. The Board of Education originally approved a budget of $3,000,000 for construction, but a few months later it increased the budget to $5,500,000. The budget was increased again to $6,000,000, making it the costliest school in New York City at the time.
The school was designed by Eliot B. Willauer of the notable architectural firm Eggers & Higgins, architects on the Thomas Jefferson Memorial, as part of the Board of Education's half-billion dollar post-World War II expansion program. The school was designed as a three-story building with 40 classrooms and a 1,120-seat auditorium, with a total school capacity of 3,000 students. The school would sit on 12 acres of land, 5.5 acres of which were for outdoor athletics. The official groundbreaking ceremony was held on January 6, 1954. Caristo Construction Corporation built the building.
The working name for the school had been East Queens High School, but before it opened the school was officially named Martin Van Buren High School, after the Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the United States and the first U.S. president born in New York state. It opened to students on September 12, 1955.

Notable alumni

This is a partial list of notable alumni of Martin Van Buren High School.