Craigmont High School

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Craigmont High School
Established 1974
Type Public
Principal Sherilyn Brown (2006-Present)
Academic staff 112
Students 1,011
Location

3333 Covington Pike

Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Colors Maroon/Grey        
Athletics 13 varsity teams
Mascot Chief
Website www.craigmontchiefs.org

Craigmont High School is a public high school (grades 9–12) located in Memphis, Tennessee, in the Raleigh community. It is part of the Memphis City Schools district. It is home to the city's only International Studies Program. The school first opened in 1974 for only 7th through 10th grade students, but each subsequent year, added a grade higher. The first graduating class was the class of 1976. In 2001, the 7th and 8th grade students, along with the 6th grade students from Brownsville Road Optional Elementary School, formed the new Craigmont Middle School at the opposite end of the same block. This was done both to help overcrowding and to reduce the extreme age and maturity gaps present in a single building.

Notable Features

Craigmont High School is the only school in the entire Memphis/Bartlett area that has a MAC/OS operated Planetarium.

Clubs

Sports

  • Baseball - Coach Matthew Hester
  • Basketball - Coach David Taylor
  • Bowling - Coach Alvin Wright
  • Cheerleading - Carolyn Mitchell
  • Cross Country - Coach Tim Anderson
  • Debate Sponsors - Sandra Edscorn and James Moseley
  • Football - Coach Cecil VanHooks
  • Marksmanship - Sgt. Aldridge
  • Senior Activity Coordinator – Valencia Jeffries
  • Soccer - Coach Gus Connelly (womens) Jason Kelly (mens)
  • Softball - Coach Tim Anderson
  • Tennis - Coach
  • Track and Field - Ryan Smith (women's) Cecil VanHooks (mens')
  • Volleyball - Coach Tim Anderson

Awards

  • Blue Ribbon Award, 1992, 1993
  • 2011 Basketball State Championship

Notable Alumni

References

  1. Dao, James (February 17, 2010). "A Muslim Son, a Murder Trial and Many Questions". The New York Times. 
  2. Kristina Goetz (November 13, 2010). "Muslim who shot soldier in Arkansas says he wanted to cause more death". The Knoxville News Sentinel. Retrieved November 15, 2010. 

External links

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