After 61 years of homeroom bells, yearbook pictures and legions of graduates, student life at Joel Elias Spingarn High School came to an end June 21, with a few tears and lots of memories.

When Spingarn opened its doors in 1952, it was the first high school to be constructed in the District in almost 40 years, costing $3.5 million. Now, it is one more shuttered D.C. public school, the latest casualty of education budget cuts and the Districtโ€™s changing demographics.

In addition to a sports legacy that is unmatched by any other D.C. public school, the closing of the school marks a time to reflect on people and events that influenced adulthood, said 1965 graduate Joseph McCormick, who just retired as dean of academic affairs at Penn State University in York, Pa.

โ€œThank you, Ms. Miles,โ€ McCormick, who holds a doctorate in political science, wrote in his just-launched web log. He was referring to Isadore W. Miles, one of his English teachers, who challenged him and his classmates with a question on the blackboard: โ€œDo you possess intellectual curiosity?โ€

โ€œYes, I do indeed possess intellectual curiosity,โ€ he wrote. โ€œHowever it took me a long time to fully appreciate the thoughtful question.โ€

Spingarnโ€™s closing triggers other thoughts, he said. โ€œThis is a city in transition and Spingarnโ€™s closing is a piece of the changing demographics,โ€ he said, noting that as the city gains more White residents, Black institutions are being shut down.

โ€œI canโ€™t believe it. Itโ€™s a good school. I love this school,โ€ Reginald Crews whispered as he ran his hand across the door of his old classroom on June 19, the day the school closed. Several alumni attended a dinner in their honor on the last day. Crews taught print shop for 22 years at Spingarn and ran into former student Joseph Champ, now a stand up comedian, with whom he shook hands and laughed about old times.

Champ, a 1998 graduate, said his family attended Spingarn and he viewed the school sitting atop a hill overlooking Benning Road and the historic Langston Golf Course as a starting point in his life. โ€œI do stand-up comedy now,โ€ he said. โ€œIt all started right here in these hallways.โ€

Some are still in disbelief about the end of a D.C. icon. Roy Barber, who was visiting Spingarn for only the second time since he graduated in 1958, was still a little stunned. Barber told the AFRO. โ€œI heard rumors about the school closing, but I didnโ€™t think it would come about. Thatโ€™s progress, I guess.โ€