Central High School (Macon, Georgia)
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Central High School | |
"We Lead; It Can Be Done" | |
Established | 1870, 1913, 1970 |
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School type | Public magnet high school |
Principal | Dr. Erin Weaver |
Colors | Orange, Blue, and White |
Location | Macon, Georgia, United States of America |
Athletics | Major sports include American football, basketball, baseball and soccer |
Mascot | Chargers |
Mission statement | Unique in Our Accomplishments, United to Educate and to Serve Beyond Self |
Website | http://www.bibb.k12.ga.us/central/index.htm |
Central High School, also known as Central-Macon, Central-Bibb, and Central Fine Arts and International Baccalaureate Magnet High School is a high school in Macon, Georgia, in the United States, serving students in grades 9-12. It is a unit of the Bibb County Public School System.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early history
Before the Civil War, the Bibb County Academy was operated as a public school; a county poor student fund paid the tuition for students unable to pay. In 1870, when Georgia established a true public school system, the Bibb County Board of Education and Orphanage was established to operate a school system for the county. The new board created grammar schools in each ward of the city and "The Central High School." The name was changed to Gresham High in the late 1880s, and the school remained open until 1913. The building later served as Gresham Grammar School.
[edit] Lanier and Miller
In 1913, the county opened Lanier High School on Forsyth Street, named for poet and Macon native Sidney Lanier. The school split in 1924 into separate schools for boys and girls, with the boys moving to a campus on Holt Avenue, and the girls remaining on Forsyth St. In 1949, Lanier added a junior high school on Hendley Street.
In 1932, Bibb County opened A.L. Miller Senior High School for Girls on Montpelier Avenue, blocks from Lanier's Holt campus. The original Forsyth St. campus continued to house a junior high school for girls until February, 1950, when Miller Junior High School opened next door to Miller Senior High School.
Lanier and Miller built traditions of excellence. The Lanier Poets won numerous state athletic titles, and became a basketball powerhouse. The school's JROTC program received national honors as an exemplary unit. Academically, Lanier and Miller grads went on to top colleges across the country.
The year 1958 marked a major change for public education in Bibb County, as Willingham and McEvoy High Schools opened for boys and girls, respectively, meaning that for the first time, white students in Bibb County would be divided by attendance zones.
[edit] Fire and Integration
However, the biggest changes to Bibb public education were yet to come. In April, 1967, fire destroyed most of the Lanier Senior campus on Holt Avenue. Over the next several years, the school was rebuilt while the Senior and Junior High schools shared the Hendley St. campus. The new building, opened in December, 1968, sat on the former site of Lanier Senior, though it faced Napier Avenue, with side entrances from Holt. Some buildings not destroyed by the fire were incorporated into the new school and still stand today as the Vocational Building, JROTC Complex, and "Old Gym" portions of Central High School.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Bibb County's schools faced a court-ordered integration. The four schools named Lanier and Miller merged to create the Central High School Complex. This fit with Bibb County's new pattern of creating high school-middle school complexes with directional names. Other school complexes created by the mergers included Northeast and Southwest, the latter of which later spun-off a new school named Southeast.
In the case of Central, the recently-built Lanier Senior building on Napier became known as "Lanier B", while the Junior High on Hendley was renamed "Lanier A"; the two shared duty as Central High School. The former Miller Junior High School for Girls became Miller A Jr. High, with the old Miller Senior becoming Miller B Jr. High. They were twin junior high schools, both of them housing both 8th and 9th graders, and serving as the feeder schools to Central, which then housed grades ten, eleven, and twelve. In the 1984-85 school year, the ninth grade was moved to the senior high school, and the two junior high schools became Miller Middle School, with the seventh grade (moved up from the elementary schools) housed in one building and the eighth grade housed in the other.
For the early years of Central, about 1970 to 1975, students remained mostly segregated by sex, with the girls at Lanier A and the boys at Lanier B, with each complex retaining the principals of the girls' and boys' schools, respectively. Eventually, girls were allowed to take some courses on the boys' campus (such as physics or German, courses not taught on the girls' campus). Finally, girls and boys were completely integrated in the courses, although their supervisions (homerooms) remained sex-segregated until 1981. By the 1980s, these vestiges of sex-segregation were completely eliminated. Lanier A ultimately housed mostly ninth-grade supervisions, while the upperclassmen were primarily in Lanier B; this arrangement persisted until Lanier A was torn down in 1997.
Following the initial mergers in 1970, many expressed anger at the outcome; school names, colors, and mascots that had existed for decades were abruptly lost and replaced with new, directional monikers. Lanier, which had become legendary for its reputation in the athletic, academic, and military fields, ceased to exist.
One development from Bibb County's abrupt reorganization of the school district was that the county gained many new private schools. Not all survive, but to this day, Macon has a far larger private school, population than similar-sized cities in Georgia (such as Augusta, Columbus, or Savannah).
[edit] Central High School
Central High emerged in 1970 as a new school straddling both sides of Hendley Street. Its sports teams were called the Chargers, and it adopted the colors orange (which, along with green, had been Lanier's), blue, and white. Both Miller and Central were larger than many middle and high schools at the time (though the Southwest complex was much larger), and faced numerous hardships due to this fact.
[to be added: information about Central from 1970-1990s]
[edit] 1990s and Beyond
In 1992, Central began offering courses in preparation for the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IB) curriculum; the first exams were given in May 1996. The school began the program as a county-wide magnet program under the guidance of principal Leontine Espy and IB coordinator Elizabeth Hinesley. While the IB program at Central started small, it has grown over the years, and now generally admits 40-60 students as freshmen. Typically, 50-75% of those students remain in the program and sit for examinations at the end of senior year. About half earn the IB diploma while the remainder receive certificates of performance. Both groups often exempt significant college coursework.
Central underwent a major change in 1997 when Westside High and H.G. Weaver Middle opened on Heath Road in the western portion of the county. Many of the higher-income areas that had been in the Miller/Central zone were moved to the new schools, along with parts of the Southwest zone. Westside immediately became the county's largest high school, and the corresponding decrease in enrollment that had been planned for Central meant that the Lanier A building (dating from 1948) would be demolished and replaced with a new Miller Middle School, closer to Central. The new school opened in the fall of 1997.
Despite the loss of so many students to Westside, the existence of the IB, Fine Arts, and JROTC magnet programs continued to draw many of Bibb County's best students to Central. At the same time, Miller Middle added a Core Knowledge/Cultural Literacy magnet program that also proved to be a big draw, and created a natural feeder for Central's magnet programs. Just as they had fifty years before, students from anywhere in Bibb County could attend Miller and Central, both of which quickly gained a reputation for academic excellence.
[edit] The Present and Future
Central continues to draw students from across Bibb County, and enrollment has remained constant or increased the past several years. These numbers have challenged the limits of the former Lanier B building, which shows signs of its age -- it has been scarcely renovated since the late 1960s, and some additional outbuildings date from the original 1920s facility. A new Central, possibly including a controversial merger with Southwest, was proposed in a 1998 bond issue and a resulting 1999 SPLOST (special purpose local sales tax), but was never built due to other priorities. An ELOST (educational local option sales tax) passed in September 2005 and has both a new Central and Southwest listed as priorities, as well as a new high school in north Bibb County attached to the newly-opened Howard Middle School that is also expected to draw many top students.
The location of the new Central remains in debate, with three possibilities that seem to have surfaced. Two use the current site -- one would tear down the current building and, for the third time in 90 years, build a high school at the Holt-Napier corner; another would place the school in the valley behind the current campus (facing Hendley St.) that houses the athletic fields, which would be moved up the hill to the present site. The third proposal would use the old Miller site on Montpelier, either incorporating the existing buildings or starting from scratch; this proposal would likely entail building a pedestrian greenway from the current Miller/Central sites, down Hendley St., to the old Miller property. All three current plans call for a fine arts center to be built on the Montpelier property that would be utilized by the Fine Arts Magnet; such a facility has been a dream of Central backers for nearly a decade.
Other recent developments include the creation of a Lanier-Miller-Central alumni association that hopes to bridge the gap between the three schools' graduates. Concrete plans have not been established, but the group held two official meetings during summer 2005, the first at the renovated Lanier Building at the Medical Center of Central Georgia, the 1913 building that was Lanier High's first home. The second meeting took place at Central's current campus and was attended by Central's principal (Erin Weaver), two former principals, the county Superintendent of Schools, and two school board members. One of the former principals (Pamela Wacter) and both board members (Susan Middleton and Tommy Barnes) are alumni themselves; Middleton was also a Central teacher and IB coordinator.
[edit] Traditions and Recent Accomplishments
- Central's Sugarbear Band performs at football games as well as in concerts, typically receiving superior rankings at festivals across the state; the group has included jazz and wind ensemble programs and is often the largest student group on campus
- The school's fight song is "Glory, Glory", in the same arrangement played by the University of Georgia's Redcoat Band. The official alma mater is "Hail to Central", an original work written by Dr. Scott C. Tobias, a former teacher at the school, though the band has from time to time played a rewritten version of "Far Above Cayuga's Waters", a popular alma mater for many schools
- The JROTC program, a key part of the school since the Lanier days, remains an honored and distinguished unit
- Central usually leads Bibb County in sending students to Georgia's Governor's Honors Program
- Central is typically well-represented at The Macon Telegraph's "Golden Eagle" Awards, honoring academic and service leaders
- The mock trial team has won nine consecutive region titles and has been ranked in the final four at state competition
- The academic bowl team has won four varsity state titles in five years
- The academic decathlon team is consistently competitive, and has won two state titles
- The school newspaper, The Central Post, won best-in-state honors for Class AAAA schools in 2005, its second year of existence. Five thousand copies of the paper were circulated through The Macon Telegraph in May 2006. (The special section can be viewed online at the Telegraph website, macon.com.)
[edit] Famous alumni
Note: This section also includes noteworthy alumni from Lanier and Miller High Schools, which combined in 1970 to form the present Central High School. See the History sections above for more information.
- Chace Ambrose, actor (Cutting Room) and screenwriter (Troma Entertainment's Citizen Toxie: The Toxic Avenger Part IV); former reporter for WGXA-TV FOX 24,
- Neil Callaway, current head football coach of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Blazers
- Manley Lanier "Sonny" Carter, Jr., astronaut and soccer player
- Tony Gilbert, University of Georgia and NFL football player
- Isaac Jackson, Kansas State University football player
- Tom Johnson, former president of CNN and the Los Angeles Times
- Bernard Ramsey, Merrill Lynch executive and philanthropist; largest single donor to University of Georgia
- Theron Sapp, University of Georgia and NFL football player
- General Robert Lee Scott, Jr., author of the book God is My Co-Pilot, later made into a film of the same name
- Phil Walden, founder of Capricorn Records
- John Morrison Birch, a missionary considered by some to be the first victim of the Cold War; the conservative John Birch Society, formed 13 years after his death, is named in his honor
[edit] External links
- Current Central High School Website
- History of Central/Lanier
- The Macon Telegraph's "Stories of the Century" feature
Educational Institutions in Macon, Georgia |
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Colleges and Universities Central Georgia Technical College • Georgia College and State University • Macon State College • Mercer University • Wesleyan College High schools Central High School • First Presbyterian Day School • Gilead Christian Academy • Hutchings High School • Mount de Sales Academy • Northeast Magnet High School • Rutland High School • Southwest Magnet High School • Stratford Academy • Tattnall Square Academy • Westside High School • Windsor Academy |