Graf-Engelbert-Schule

Graf-Engelbert School is an urban high school for boys and girls in Bochum, Germany. Near the center of the city and the tree-lined Königsallee, it is located on Else-Hirsch-Straße. Else Hirsch was a teacher in Bochum during the Third Reich and organized ten children's transports, saving many lives, though she herself perished in the Holocaust.[1][2]

Graf-Engelbert School

Graf-Engelbert School is only a few hundred meters from the Schiller School (also a high school). Due to that proximity, there are common courses (also including the Albert Einstein School) in all subjects in the upper classes.

At one point, Graf-Engelbert was a boys-only high school, but was combined with a girls' high school which was then located near the Schiller School. Currently, 67 teachers teach approximately 930 students at Graf-Engelbert.

Notable alumni

gollark: Warp drive is somewhat cool, but GalactiCraft undoubtedly has better autopilotable rocket stuff.
gollark: I remember I contraapioformically tried to make oxygen using electrolyzers, and I needed highly impractical amounts of them.
gollark: Hmm, that reminds me, AR makes it VERY bee to make oxygen in-situ.
gollark: I would like *a* space mod, as the GTech™ space station could use orbital bombardment.
gollark: Is AR better perfwise?

References

  1. Biography of Else Hirsch. City of Bochum official website. Retrieved April 24, 2010 (in German)
  2. Karin Finkbohner, Betti Helbing, Carola Horn, Anita Krämer, Astrid Schmidt-Ritter, Kathy Vowe. Wider das Vergessen — Widerstand und Verfolgung Bochumer Frauen und Zwangsarbeiterinnen 1933–1945 pp. 62-63. Europäischer Universitätsverlag, ISBN 978-3-932329-62-3 (in German)


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