Douglas County High School (Douglasville, Georgia)

Douglas County High School
Address
8705 Campbellton St.
Douglasville, Georgia 30134-2202
United States
Coordinates 33°44′35″N 84°44′37″W / 33.743164°N 84.743547°W / 33.743164; -84.743547Coordinates: 33°44′35″N 84°44′37″W / 33.743164°N 84.743547°W / 33.743164; -84.743547[1]
Information
Established 1937
School district Douglas County School District
CEEB code 111110
Principal Andre Weaver
Teaching staff 115 FTE (2010-11)[2]
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 2,168 (2010-11)[2]
Student to teacher ratio 18.85 (2010-11)[2]
School color(s) Navy blue and gold         
Athletics GHSA 3-AAAAAA
Mascot Tiger
Newspaper Tiger Talk
Yearbook DOCOHAN
Website Douglas County High School

Douglas County High School, also known as Douglas County Comprehensive High School, is a public high school in Douglasville, Georgia, United States. It was the first high school to open in the Douglas County School District.

History

Douglas County, Georgia was established in 1870 during the Reconstruction of the South. The first public high school for the county was built in 1880 on the present day site of the National Guard Armory in Douglasville. This schoolhouse was used up for most of the county's high school needs until 1937, when President Roosevelt's New Deal WPA program designated that a new school would be built, named Douglasville High School.

Over the years, the name was changed to Douglas County High School, and the small, twelve-classroom building was added to and built up around. The first major change came when the wooden framed auditorium caught fire and left the building exposed. Later the original building was converted into the administrative building, and another building was added to it. This was the Banks Building, which added a tremendous amount of classrooms to the school. A small elementary school was built behind the high, school called Warren Dorris Elementary. As the high school population grew, the elementary school was attached with a breezeway to the next building. A small gymnasium and a football playing field were also added.

After the first buildings were completed, there was a gap between the next renovations, but eventually the fourth building was added to the campus. The Cloer Building was added as a science building, and housed the schools mechanic and auto shop. This building was left freestanding (unlike the other three academia-centered buildings) and is no longer home to the mechanics program, as it was disbanded to make room for other programs. A new gymnasium was added to the campus. This new gym was much larger than the first, and was equipped with air conditioning. It is used today as the school's primary gym for most physical education classes.

In the early 1990s, the original building of the school, the Mashburn Building, was mostly destroyed in a fire. The fire started when a janitor found out that he was about to lose his job at the school. He decided that the only way to save his job was to prove himself a hero. He intended to create a small chemical fire in a closet, then put it out after someone noticed it. He imagined that the administrators would see his courage and ability to protect the children, and let him keep his job. He set a small fire in a closet off of the Mashburn Building's Great Hall, but he didn't realize that the 60-year-old building's hardwood floors had absorbed much of the chemicals that had been used to clean it for the better half of a century. The fire spread quicker than he had expected, and he was not able to contain it. The fire destroyed the main office, the cafeteria, part of the library, and the school's theater before the fire department was able to get it under control. The janitor was arrested and convicted of arson as well as child endangerment. The school rebuilt the Mashburn Building and added a new section of the building that houses the fine arts department (Theater, Band, and Choir).

Later that decade, the connecting hallway of the Mashburn and Banks buildings collapsed during a major storm. It was quickly replaced.

The school now holds the title of oldest, largest, and most grossly populated of all the schools in the county. It is the only school in the county to offer the magnet International Baccalaureate Diploma Program.

It is less than a mile away from downtown Douglasville and is part of the Douglas County Historic District.

Campus

The Douglas County High School campus is made up of several facilities:

Academics:

Athletics:

Curriculum

Douglas County High School is home to the district's IB Diploma Programme.[3] The first class of IB students graduated in 2010. Out of the 52 students that were in the program their senior year, two thirds graduated with the diploma. The IB magnet program has greatly increased Douglas County's academic performance. Students residing in the Douglas County School District can apply to go to Douglas County High as a part of the IB Program in their eighth grade year.

Extracurricular activities

Douglas County High School offers over 40 clubs and other extracurricular activities. It offers the most extra-curricular clubs in the school district. Some of these activities include:

Athletics

Douglas County High School teams, known as the Tigers, compete in the Georgia High School Association AAAAAA classification. The school fields teams in baseball, basketball, cheerleading, cross country, football, golf, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball, and wrestling.

Notable alumni

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.