Alfred Ely Beach High School | |
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Established | 1867 |
Type | Public secondary |
Principal | Derrick Muhammad |
Faculty | 70[1] |
Teaching staff | 66.0[2] |
Students | 1,328 [2] |
Grades | 9–12[2] |
Location | 3001 Hopkins Street, Savannah, Georgia, United States |
District | Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools |
Accreditation | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools |
Colors | Blue and gold |
Nickname | Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs |
Yearbook | 'The Golden Bulldog' |
Website | www.savannah.chatham.k12.ga.us |
Alfred Ely Beach High School is one of the oldest public high schools located in Savannah, Georgia, USA.
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In 1867, the Beach Institute was established by the Freedmen's Bureau with funds donated by Alfred Ely Beach, editor of Scientific American. The school was privately funded as a manual training school to provide a means for newly freed African Americans to assimilate into white society.[3] By 1874, the institute was appropriated by the Savannah-Chatham Board of Education for the purpose of providing free education to Savannah's African American citizenry. Although the Beach Institute closed its doors in 1915, it was reopened as an African American cultural center and is currently operated by the King-Tisdell Cottage Foundation. The Beach name survives in the name of Alfred E. Beach High School.
In 2010, Beach High School was selected as the recipient of "Outstanding Service By a High School" at the 38th annual Jefferson Awards, an honor for community service and volunteerism. [4] |
At the end of the 2009-2010 academic year, the Savannah-Chatham County School District released the school's faculty and staff personnel citing inadequate academic progress over the previous five years. [5]
Beach High is open to residents of Chatham County grades 9th through 12th.
Beach High students undertake a college preparatory curriculum that includes four years of English, history, and laboratory-based sciences (chemistry and physics are required), three years of mathematics (most students opt for four) and foreign language, a semester each of introductory art, music, health, and computer science, and two lab-based technology courses. It offers students a broad selection of elective courses.
Beach offers the district's only CISCO networking academy. Students who complete this program are eligible to take the CISCO Certified Network Associate examination.[6] Additionally the Health Professions program partners with Memorial Health University Medical Center and CVS Pharmacy to provide internships for Beach High students.[6]
Students can choose from Advanced Placement courses in Calculus, English III, English IV, US History, European History, and Biology.[6]
The school has special education programs for the following areas:[6]
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Information provided by the Savannah-Chatham County board of Education.[6]
Beach High fields 11 varsity teams include football, basketball, baseball, soccer, tennis, wrestling, softball, and volleyball.[6] The teams compete in the Georgia High School Association's Region 3-AAAAA.
The school won the boys state basketball championship in 1953, 1963, 1964, and 1965.[7]
The school won a boys state basketball championship in 1967 (the first year that African-Americans were allowed to play in the Georgia High School Association) under coach Russell Ellington.[8][9] The girls basketball team won a state championship in 2000.[10]
Alumni have become President of Savannah State College, Georgia State Senator, Mayor of Savannah, and Dean of a major university in New England.
Name | Class year | Notability | References |
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Russell Ellington | 1956 | Former NFL player and basketball coach | |
Matt "Showbiz" Jackson | Former member of the Harlem Globetrotters | [11] | |
Otis Johnson | 1960 | Mayor of Savannah, Georgia (2003–present) | |
Wanda Smalls Lloyd | 1967 | The first black editor of The Montgomery Advertiser | [12] |
Larry "Gator" Rivers | Former member of the Harlem Globetrotters | [13] | |
Regina Thomas | 1970 | Georgia State Senator (2000–present); member Georgia House of Representatives (1995 to 1998) | [12][14] |
James E. Wright | Flight instructor for the World War II Tuskegee Airmen | [15] |
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