Central Cabarrus High School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Central Cabarrus High School CCHS School Crest

Established 1966
School type public school
Principal Brad Hinson
Location Concord, N.C.
Enrollment 1,800
Athletic Conference ME-CA 6 4A
Colors Forest green, gold
Nickname Vikings
Rival Schools Jay M. Robinson, Northwest Cabarrus
Homepage Official Site

Central Cabarrus High School, commonly referred to locally as Central, is a comprehensive public high school located in Concord, North Carolina. With an enrollment of approximately 1,850 students, it is the largest high school in the Cabarrus County Schools system. It opened, along with Northwest Cabarrus High School, in 1966.

Contents

[edit] School History

Central Cabarrus High School was formed by joining three area high schools: Bethel, Harrisburg, and Hartsell. In its beginning, Central was home to 850 students and 45 teachers. The focal point of the new school was the C.A. Furr Planetarium, the only school planetarium in the state of North Carolina. Central boasted a space age classroom during a space enthralled time.

Mr. M.L. Barnes, for whom the theatre is named, was the first principal of Central Cabarrus. At the time, Jay M. Robinson was the superintendent of Cabarrus County Schools and Joseph N. Fries, the assistant superintendent. Inaugural coaches and long-time Central staff included head football coach, Lloyd "Dink" Jordan, basketball coaches, Earl Mason and Georgia Roberson, and track coach, Gary "Chromedome" Drinnen.

Born in Central's first year of operation were publications, The Centarune, the school yearbook, and The Norlande, the school newspaper. Mr. Euell Gary Brady served as the first librarian with 8000 books and 125 periodicals. "Dear Ruth," Central's first theatrical production was directed by Mrs. Marjorie Hudson. Director Neil Wilson led the first band which consisted of 40 members, and Mr. David Stantz was the first chorus teacher.

On October 31, 2006 the school's greenhouse was burned down. The cause was arson and the person responsible has been caught. A few surrounding campus buildings were also destroyed.

[edit] Academics

Central's academic curriculum falls in line with the North Carolina Standard Course of Study in all core subject areas. The school also offers a variety of Advanced Placement courses.

Central has been consistently recognized as a "School of Distinction" under the state's ABC standards for public schools.

[edit] Athletics

Central's athletic teams are known as the Vikings. The school is in the 4A classification of the North Carolina High School Athletic Association and competes in the ME-CA 6 Conference ("ME-CA" stands for Mecklenburg and Cabarrus, the two counties represented in the league). The school sponsors boys' cross country, football, soccer, basketball, swimming, wrestling, baseball, golf, track and field, and tennis; and girls' cross country, soccer, volleyball, basketball, swimming, softball, tennis, track and field, and cheerleading.

Central has arguably the most successful athletic program of the five high schools in Cabarrus County. Most visible of all athletic programs is the school's softball team, which has won five state championships (3A classification in 1993, 2000, and 2001; 4A classification in 2004 and 2005). A May 2006 loss to North Davidson in the 4A softball playoffs broke the Lady Vikings' win streak of 83 games. The 2006 season ended with the softball team ranked 2nd in the nation after several weeks at the number one spot according to the NFCA poll. In addition to softball, Central's boys basketball team has reared numerous college prospects and won the 3A state championship in 2000.

[edit] Notable Alumni

[edit] Principals

  • M.L. Barnes (1965-?)
  • Bob Misenheimer (?-?)
  • Gary Drinnen (?-1991)
  • John Lentz (1991-1998)
  • Anne Shuping (1998-2003)
  • Chris Lowder (2003-2005)
  • Brad Hinson (2005- )