Public high school in East St. Louis, Illinois, United States
East St. Louis Senior High School 4901 State Street
, 62205
Coordinates 38°36′31″N 90°06′12″W / 38.60861°N 90.10333°W / 38.60861; -90.10333 Type Public Established 1865[ 1] School district East Saint Louis Public Schools Principal Brittany Green Faculty 82.83 (FTE )[ 2] Grades 9–12 Enrollment 1,299 (2022–23)[ 2] Student to teacher ratio 15.68[ 2] Color(s) Orange and royal blue [ 3] Slogan All gas, No breaks Sports Basketball (men's & women's), Football, Wrestling, Volleyball (men's & women’s) Cheerleading, Track & Field (men's & women's), Baseball, Softball, Tennis Mascot Airplane Team name Flyers/Flyerettes[ 3] Website eastside.estl189.com
East Saint Louis Senior High School is the only high school located in East St. Louis, Illinois . The school serves about 1,438 students in grades 9 to 12 in the East Saint Louis Public Schools district.[ 2] It was featured in the Jonathan Kozol book Savage Inequalities . In 1998, East St. Louis Lincoln High School consolidated with East St. Louis High.[ 4]
In addition to East St. Louis, the district (this is the sole comprehensive high school of the district) also includes portions of Canteen , Centreville , and Stites Townships in northwestern St. Clair County . The district also includes all of Washington Park , much of Alorton and Centreville , and portions of Belleville , Caseyville , Fairmont City , Fairview Heights , and Madison .[ 5]
East St. Louis Senior High School won the 2008 Class 7A football state championship against Geneva High School .[ 6] The Flyers have a storied history in Illinois high school football, having won the state championship over a half-dozen times and the national championship twice. The Flyers beat Prairie Ridge in 2022 for the Class 6A football title.[ 7] From 1976 to the beginning of the 1995 season, the Flyers' coach was Bob Shannon . Two years of Flyers football during that period were the subject of a book, The Right Kind of Heroes .
The Flyers compete in the Southwestern Conference .
Hank Bauer , former MLB right fielder (New York Yankees , Kansas City Athletics ) and manager (Kansas City Athletics , Baltimore Orioles ); 8x World Series champion; member of Baltimore Orioles Hall of Fame .
Tom Bayless , former NFL offensive and defensive lineman
Ed Blake , former MLB pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds and the Kansas City Athletics
Rose Marion Boylan , (ca. 1875-1947) known professionally as Rose Marion, newspaper reporter and clubwoman
Walter Boyne , author of 32 books and 500 articles about aviation; was the director of the National Air & Space Museum
Homer Bush , former MLB second baseman ; 1998 World Series Champion
Don Choate , former MLB pitcher
Jimmy Connors , tennis Hall of Famer
Bryan Cox , former NFL linebacker ; NFL assistant coach
Cleveland Crosby , former NFL defensive end
Al Dixon , former NFL tight end
William Dollar , one of the nation's leading performers in the terpsichorean art of ballet
Thomas L. Fekete , Illinois state representative and lawyer
Larry Gladney , Professor of Physics, Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut
Kerry Glenn , former NFL cornerback
Dawn Harper-Nelson , Olympic hurdler ; Gold medalist in 100-meter hurdles at 2008 Summer Olympics
James Harris , former NFL defensive end
Dana Howard , former NFL linebacker ; 1994 Dick Butkus Award winner; 2017 College Football Hall of Fame inductee.
Sam Jethroe , oldest baseball player to win "Rookie of the Year" award with the Boston Braves
Antonio Johnson , current NFL defensive back
Shelby Jordan , former NFL offensive tackle for the New England Patriots and the Los Angeles Raiders
Al Joyner , Olympic gold medal winner in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics
Bennie Lewis , small forward for Frankston Blues of Australia's SEABL .
Dominic Lovett , football player[ 8]
Jean Madeira , opera mezzo-soprano.
Joe May , gospel singer known as the "Thunderbolt of the Midwest"
Darius Miles , former NBA power forward [ 9]
Montez Murphy , former NFL defensive tackle
Damien Nash , former NFL running back
Toriano Pride , college football defensive back for the Clemson Tigers and the Missouri Tigers [ 10]
Al Randolph , former NFL defensive back
Victor Scott , former NFL defensive back
Dennis Stallings , former NFL linebacker
Bob Turley , former MLB pitcher; 1958 Cy Young Award winner, World Series MVP , and AL wins leader .
Bill Walker , former MLB pitcher with the New York Giants and St. Louis Browns ; 2x NL ERA leader .
Johnny Wyrostek , former MLB outfielder; 2x MLB All-Star with Cincinnati Reds .
Marion Lee Wilde , class of 1939, one of the Wilde Twins. Movie actress 1942-1949.
Mary Lynn Wilde , class of 1939, one of the Wilde Twins. Movie actress 1942-1953.
Kellen Winslow , class of 1975, former NFL tight end for San Diego Chargers ; NFL and College Football Hall of Fame inductee.
^ Petraitas, Thomas (April 7, 2005). "Parsons Field: Even Teenagers Needed a Place to Play" . Preservation Research Office. Archived from the original on December 1, 2023. Retrieved June 10, 2024 .
^ a b c d "East St Louis Senior High School]" . National Center for Education Statistics . Retrieved March 19, 2024 .
^ a b "East St. Louis Senior High School" . Illinois High School Association . Retrieved 2024-03-27 .
^ "East St. Louis Lincoln" . illinoishsglorydays.com . Retrieved 12 July 2015 .
^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: St. Clair County, IL" (PDF) . U.S. Census Bureau . Retrieved 2023-07-06 .
^ "Geneva falls short of first championship bid" . Shaw Local News Network . December 5, 2008.
^ "East St. Louis shows off talent, routs Prairie Ridge for Class 6A state title" . Shaw Local . Retrieved 2023-03-10 .
^ "Dominic Lovett - Football" . University of Missouri Athletics .
^ "East St. Louis' Miles faces fantastic future" . Daily Herald . March 18, 2000.[dead link ]
^ Shepherd Jr., Wendell (6 December 2023). "Former Clemson DB, East St. Louis star Toriano Pride Jr. commits to Mizzou" . Columbia Missourian . Retrieved 12 May 2024 .
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