This article appears to be slanted towards recent events. (November 2023) |
Concord High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
170 Warren St. , United States | |
Coordinates | 43°12′02″N 71°33′06″W / 43.20056°N 71.55167°W |
Information | |
Type | Public High School |
Motto | Latin: Scientia, Concordia, Sapientia[1] (Knowledge, Harmony and Wisdom) |
Established | 1846 |
Status | Currently operational |
School district | Concord School District |
NCES District ID | 3302460[2] |
NCES School ID | 330246000055[3] |
Principal | Timothy Herbert |
Teaching staff | 111.10 (FTE)[4] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Number of students | 1,467 (2022-2023)[4] |
Student to teacher ratio | 13.20[4] |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Crimson and White |
Athletics | Crimson Tide |
Mascot | Tidy the Duck |
Yearbook | The Crimson [5] |
Affiliation | Concord School District |
Website | chs |
Concord High School during a 2007 snowstorm | |
The former high school on State and School streets, completed in 1890, as it appeared in 1907 |
Concord High School is a public high school in Concord, New Hampshire, in the United States.
Concord's first public high school was established in 1846. The original building was the building on the corner of State and School streets. A new school house was built in 1862, which stood until April 1888, when it burned down during a fire started by a chemistry experiment. For the next two years, students took their classes in City Hall. A new high school was built on the same lot, completed and dedicated in September 1890. In 1907, yet another Concord High School, designed to accommodate 500 students, was built on Spring Street in the building which became Kimball School.[6] (The building was demolished in 2012 to make way for the new Christa McAuliffe Elementary School.[7]) The current high school was built in 1927[8] on Warren Street, with new wings added in 1960 and 1996.
Some of the features that Concord High currently has are a new media center (library), student center (cafeteria), performing arts area, and four commons areas, each with its own administrative and student community where student lockers were located. ConcordTV, the local public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV station for Concord, is currently located in Concord High.[9] There is a bridge/connector between two wings, east and west, of the building.
Charles C. Cook was Headmaster for thirty years from 1906 to 1936. Cook began the National Honor Society Chapter which still exists at Concord High School. Other long-serving principals include John E. Reed who was principal from 1939 to 1960, J. Preston Barry from 1963 to 1972, Charlie Foley who was principal from 1973 to 1990, Gene Connolly who was principal from 2001 to 2016. Edward W. Crawford died in office in 1962 after serving several years as a very popular principal. Some of the more recent principals of the school include Tom Sica from 2016 to 2020 and Michael Reardon from 2020 to present.[10]
In the recent history of Concord High School, Dr. Christine Rath (principal from 1991 to 1997) oversaw the transformation of the school from a three-year to a four-year school which included ninth-grade students. At the same time Rath assisted in the design of the current high school building which was able to accommodate every high school student in Concord.
The current athletic director is Steve Mello (two time AD of the year).[11]
Some athletic teams that Concord High School has are cross country, football, wrestling, golf and soccer.[12]
On December 3, 1985, a 16 year old dropout named Louis Cartier entered the building with a shotgun, and was promptly killed by Concord police officers. No other fatalities occurred in the shooting, other than Cartier.[13]
During the 1999-2000 school year, teacher Joanne McGlynn's media literacy class gained nationwide prominence when its students fact-checked claims made in the media about a quote regarding the "Love Canal" that Al Gore had made when addressing the school.[14][15]
At Concord High's first dance of the 2006–2007 school year, the school drew local media attention when administration ejected about a dozen students for grinding, a style of dancing that the administration deemed overly sexual for a school function. In protest of this, about 150 other students walked out of the dance.[16] The administration met with student body leaders to try to reach an agreement. They were not able to, and for the first time in the school's history, the homecoming dance was postponed, and every other dance that year was canceled. An exception was made for the senior prom, however.
Another notable event which occurred at Concord High School was the resignation of Principal Tom Sica. Sica had been the principal of Rundlett Middle school before moving up to Concord High School in 2016. During his time as principal at Rundlett, allegations of sexual assault and misconduct were placed upon a teacher, Howie Leung.[17] The student who brought this to Sica's attention was promptly suspended for three days for "spreading 'malicious and slanderous gossip'". Once he had moved to the high school, news of this suspension, and the circumstances surrounding it, were brought to the public, leading to outrage in the Concord community. Leung was arrested in 2019 for sexual assault charges,[18] and pled "not guilty".[19]
Adams notes, 'The city of Concord, where I attended high school, was the nerve central of the presidential primary campaigns which rolled into town every four years…'
He graduated first in his class from Concord High School in 1999. Throughout high school, basketball dominated the conversation at home; it didn't hurt that he played on a winning team. Concord High School were the NHIAA Champions three years in a row while he was there.
Lefebvre, 51, had spent six seasons on the Giants staff, including the past five as hitting coach. The former big-league outfielder grew up in New Hampshire and played with Sabean at Concord High School, then at Eckerd College in Florida.
Mrs. McAuliffe, who was born in Boston and grew up in Framingham, Mass., taught social studies at Concord High School before her selection last July from 10,000 applicants for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Teacher in Space program.
Tara Mounsey, a lover of challenges and an All-Everything athlete at Concord High School, had to think for a moment.
At Concord High School, he was voted 'most literary,' 'most sophisticated' and 'most likely to succeed.' The high school yearbook described him as 'witty and in constant demand' and said he enjoyed 'giving and attending scandalous parties.'