List of public schools in Louisville, Kentucky


There are more than 145 public schools in Louisville, Kentucky, servicing nearly 100,000 students in kindergarten through 12th grade education. The primary public education provider is Jefferson County Public Schools.
Schools are typically categorized as elementary, middle or high schools, though some exceptions exist. J. Graham Brown School offers education for all grades in one school. Moore Traditional School is a combined middle and high school. The Anchorage School is the sole school of AISD, educating for grades K-8.

Elementary schools

Public elementary schools provide education through fifth grade. Some elementary schools offer pre-kindergarten programs.
PictureSchool nameOpening dateOrigin of name and other information
Atkinson Elementary School1902Joseph B. Atkinson, longtime city school board member.
Auburndale Elementary School1924Located in Auburndale neighborhood.
120pxAudubon Traditional Elementary School1954
John J. Audubon, painter and bird enthusiast.
Bates Elementary School1955James H. Bates, longtime chairman of the Jefferson County Board of Education.
Home of Safety City.
Blake Elementary School1970
Bloom Elementary School 1896I.N. Bloom; physician, City of Louisville Board of Education member 1911–1922, and first board president.
Blue Lick Elementary School1966Located on Blue Lick Road.
Bowen Elementary School1969Known as "The greatest school on earth".
Albert S. Brandeis Elementary School1913Albert S. Brandeis.
Breckinridge-Franklin Elementary School1999Merger of John C. Breckinridge Elementary and Benjamin Franklin Elementary School in 2000.
Byck Elementary School1961Dann Conrad Byck, member of the Louisville Board of Aldermen and member of the City of Louisville Board of Education 1955–1959.
Camp Taylor Elementary School1917Located in Camp Taylor neighborhood, site of Camp Zachary Taylor 1917–1921.
Cane Run Elementary School1832Located on Cane Run Road. The school was originally housed in a log cabin, and may have had as many of seven different buildings. Present building constructed in 1972.
Carter Traditional School1918Jessie R. Carter.
Chancey Elementary School2002Malcom B. Chancey, local business leader who established the Jefferson County Public Education Foundation.
Chenoweth Elementary School1954Located near Chenoweth Lane.
Cochran Elementary School1900Gavin H. Cochran.
Cochrane Elementary School1968Garland S. Cochrane.
Coleridge-Taylor Montessori Elementary School1969Composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.
Coral Ridge Elementary School1971Located in the Coral Ridge neighborhood.
Crums Lane Elementary School1962Located on Crums Lane.
Dixie Elementary School1960Located behind Valley Traditional High School, on Dixie Highway.
Dunn Elementary School1972
Eisenhower Elementary School1972U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Engelhard Elementary School1919Victor S. Engelhard. Located in Old Louisville; 1004 South First Street, Louisville, KY 40203.
Fairdale Elementary School1913Located in the Fairdale community.
Farmer Elementary School2007James E. Farmer, teacher, principal and deputy superintendent of Jefferson County Public Schools until 1976.
Fern Creek Elementary School1911Located in the Fern Creek community. The earliest building directly related to the present school was constructed in 1911. There was first a log-cabin school was opened in area around 1792. That building, however, cannot be directly linked to the present-day school.
Field Elementary School1915Judge Emmet Field.
Foster Academy1917Composer Stephen Foster.
Frayser Elementary School1925Nannie Lee Frayser.
Goldsmith Elementary School1955Located on Goldsmith Lane. Goldsmith is an International/Cultural Studies magnet.
Southeast Christian Church, now one of the largest Protestant churches in the U.S., held its first service at the school in July 1962, and met there until it purchased its first property in October of that year.
Greathouse/Shryock Traditional Elementary School1980Created with the merger of Greathouse Elementary and Shryock Elementary.
Greenwood Elementary School1957Located on Greenwood Road.
Gutermuth Elementary School1970Leona Gutermuth.
Hartstern Elementary School1969Fred J. Hartstern, chief architect of the old Louisville Board of Education. He later created his own firm which designed over 45 school buildings including Ballard and Moore High Schools.
Hawthorne Elementary School1954Located in Hawthorne neighborhood.
120pxHazelwood Elementary School1951Located in Iroquois Homes/Hazelwood neighborhood.
120pxHite Elementary School1963Jane Glass Hite. Located in Middletown behind Eastern High School.
Indian Trail Elementary School1959Located on Indian Trail.
Jacob Elementary School1932Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky Richard Taylor Jacob.
120pxJeffersontown Elementary School1870sLocated in the city of Jeffersontown.
Johnsontown Road Elementary School1967Located on Johnsontown Road.
Kennedy Montessori School1964U.S. President John F. Kennedy, named the year after his November 1963 assassination.
Kenwood Elementary School1955Located in Kenwood neighborhood.
Kerrick Elementary School1876Charles H., George, and Harry Kerrick who donated land for the original school.
King Elementary School1969Civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr., named the year after his April 1968 assassination.
Klondike Lane Elementary School1971Located on Klondike Lane.
Laukhuf Elementary School1974Louis H.C. & Emily Laukhuf.
Layne Elementary School1969Offers an academic Honors Program for third, fourth, and fifth graders in reading and math.
Lincoln Elementary Performing Arts School1966U.S. President Abraham Lincoln.
Lowe Elementary School1974John Lowe.
Luhr Elementary School1966Mattie B. Luhr.
Maupin Elementary School1985Originally Parkland Elementary School, was renamed for Milburn Taylor Maupin, first African-American central office administrator in the Louisville Public Schools. He served as interim superintendent January–June 1975 and retired as deputy superintendent of Jefferson County Public Schools in 1978.
McFerran Preparatory Academy1919John B. McFerran, land company president who donated land for Jeffersontown Elementary.
Medora Elementary School1880sLocated in Medora neighborhood.
Middletown Elementary School1909Located in the city of Middletown.
Mill Creek Elementary Schoolbef. 1876Earliest records place the school's existence on/or before 1876. The current building was opened in 1970.
Minors Lane Elementary School1968Located on Minors Lane.
Norton Commons Elementary School2016Attached to local YMCA.
Norton Elementary School1967Jane M. Norton, former school board member and WAVE-TV president.
Okolona Elementary School1924Located in Okolona community. Formerly known as Okolona High School from 1927 to 1951.
Perry Elementary School2023Named after William H. Perry, first African-American physician to receive a Kentucky medical license.
Portland Elementary School1853Located in Portland neighborhood.
Price Elementary School1969Sarah Jacob Price, school's first principal.
120pxRangeland Elementary SchoolLocated on Rangeland Road.
Rutherford Elementary School1951Sally B. Rutherford.
Sanders Elementary School1962Provides specialized instrumental programs, including band, orchestra, and the Weisberg Suzuki Violin Program.
Schaffner Traditional School1955Named after Henry B. Schaffner, member of the Kentucky Board of Education.
Semple Elementary School1932Named for Louisville-born geographer Ellen Churchill Semple.
Shacklette Elementary School1966-
Shelby Traditional Academybefore 1850First Governor of Kentucky, Isaac Shelby.
The school was originally constructed by German immigrants. It was purchased by the Louisville Board of Education in 1868. The name and mission of the school were changed in 2008.
120pxSlaughter Elementary School1967Horace B. Slaughter.
Smyrna Elementary School1961Located in Smyrna neighborhood.
St. Matthews Elementary School1955Located at 601 Browns Lane in the city of St. Matthews. St. Matthews current principal is Mr. Scott Collier.
Stonestreet Elementary School1958Rosa Phillips Stonestreet, only female superintendent in the history of public education in Louisville's old City Board of Education.
Stopher Elementary School2007Joseph E. Stopher, attorney and president of Gheens Foundation, a non-profit organization supporting education projects.
Trunnell Elementary School1967Bertha Trunnell, long time educator in Jefferson County's south end. Trunnell's dedication ceremony took place on October 19, 1967. The school was built on farmland purchased from Clem Wiser. The Wiser family had farmed the land for 150 years. It was first settled by Charles Wiser in the 1800s.
Tully Elementary School1978Roberta B. Tully.
Located on College Drive in Jeffersontown, KY on the site of the original Jeffersontown Elementary.
Waller-Williams Environmental2025
Watterson Elementary School1970Henry Watterson, prominent Louisville newspaper editor and namesake of the Watterson Expressway.
Wellington Elementary School1968Sara Belle Wellington.
Wheeler Elementary School1969Virginia Wheeler.
Whitney Young Elementary at Engelhard1971Whitney Moore Young Jr., social worker and civil rights leader, became executive director of the National Urban League in 1961 and the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969. Young Elementary School merged with Engelhard Elementary School in 2025.
Wilder Elementary School1957Ninde S. Wilder.
Wilkerson Elementary School1956Sylvia Wilkerson.
Wilt Elementary School1967Paxton Wilt: Wilt is named for Paxton M. Wilt, a Jefferson County Board of Education member and executive with the Brown and Williamson company.
Zachary Taylor Elementary School1959U.S. President Zachary Taylor, finished on November 9, 1959, located in Westport Road.