Hueytown High School

Hueytown High School
Address
4881 15th Street Road
Hueytown, Alabama, 35023
United States
Information
Motto Honor, Hard work, Success
Established 1922
School district Jefferson County Board of Education
CEEB Code 011463
Principal Dr. Gayle Gober
Teaching staff 63 (2006-07)[1]
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1,118 (2012-13)[1]
Student to teacher ratio 16.3 (2006-07)[1]
Color(s) Purple and Gold          
Athletics AHSAA Class 6A
Mascot Golden Gopher
Yearbook Retrospect
Website http://www.facebook.com/hueytownhs

Hueytown High School is a public high school in Hueytown, Alabama. It is part of the Jefferson County Board of Education school system. Hueytown High was founded in 1922. It is currently a 6A school with an enrollment in 2009 of 1032 students in Grades 9-12. The current principal is Dr. Gayle Gober.

History

The first Hueytown High School began classes on February 25, 1921, with students who had transferred from Bessemer High School. It was one of six new high schools in the Jefferson County system at that time. It had an enrollment of just 66 students with 25 seniors in the first graduating class in 1922. Mr. Harley F. Gilmore was the first principal and athletic director, serving as principal from 1921 until his retirement in 1956. Only six teachers served on the original staff with Mr. Gilmore.[2]

Subjects available in those early years included French, Latin, chemistry, mathematics, and history. Home economics was offered for girls and manual arts (woodworking) for the boys.[2]

In 1957, enrollment had reached 1,273. The next year the school relocated to its Dabbs Avenue campus serving grades 10-12. The old building then became Pittman Junior High School (serving grades 7-9) and continued in that capacity until May 1970.[2]

Principals Years of Service
Mr. Harley F. Gilmore
1921-1956
Mr. Charles Vines
1957-1962
Mr. Louis F. Marty
1962-1975
Mr. Pat A. Salamone
1975-1979
Mr. Haywood L. Atkinson 1979 - 1992
Mrs. B. Kaye Reach 1992 - 1995
Mr. John O. Hudson 1995 - 1998
Ms. Kay P. Lindsey 1998 -2001
Dr. Judson L. Jones 2001-2006
Mr. Randy H. McCarty 2006 - 2009
Dr. Gayle Gober 2009–Present

Campus

Hueytown High School has been located at three different sites since its founding.

Extracurricular activity (non-athletic)

Student groups and activities include art club, band, cheerleading, choir, dance team, debate team, DECA, drama club, FBLA, FCCLA, First Priority, color guard, Hueytown Ambassadors, Key Club, majorettes, math team, National Honor Society, Scholar's Bowl, and Science Olympiad.

Athletic history

Today the school's sports teams, known as the Hueytown Golden Gophers, compete in baseball, basketball, football, golf, softball, tennis, track, cross-country, soccer, wrestling and volleyball.[7]

On September 30, 1921, the as yet unnamed "Golden Gophers" played the school's first ever football game by visiting Jefferson County High School (present day Tarrant High). The next week the team played its first ever home game against Alliance High School and won 9-0. They would complete that inaugural season with a record of 3-4, including a loss to the Howard College Grass Cutters (Now Samford University). That same season the boys' baseball team posted a 10-3 record and the girls' basketball team finished 4-1.[8]

During the next six years the football program would have a record of 28-16-5, including the 1924 team (7-1-1) which outscored opponents by the margin of 256-38. The 1924 squad had four shutouts and a victory over St. Bernard College of Cullman.[9]

The Gophers greatest football era would come under Melvin Vines who coached the team from 1948-1962 with a record of 78-44-9.[10] His best team was the 1958 unit (10-0), the first undefeated and untied team in school history. They had an amazing eight shutouts and outscored opponents 253-26. They won the Jefferson County Championship (The Dental Clinic Game) over Fairfield High School that same year. Vines' teams won five county championships at a time when no statewide playoff system existed.[11] Since the advent of a state playoff system, the football team has made several appearances with trips to the playoffs in 1974, 1975, 1995, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011. The 2010 football team set a team record by winning 11 games. The 2011 squad broke that record winning all 11 regular-season games and then winning three rounds in the state playoff. They finished with a record of 14-1, thus making it the most games won by any football team in Hueytown history.

Listed below are the head football coaches in school history who had winning records.

Head Football Coach Won/Loss Record Pct. Won Best W/L (Year) Years Coached
Melvin Vines
77-44-10
.625
10-0 (1959)
1948-1962
Morris Higginbotham
38-36-4
.512
7-1-1 (1963)
1963-66, 1978–81
John Galloway
36-34
.514
7-3 (1988)
1986-1992
Matt Scott
35-13
.507
14-1 (2011)
2009-2012
Jeff Smith
35-31
.789
10-3 (2007)
2003-2008
Mike Battles
19-15
.558
9-5 (1995)
1993-1995
Ralph "Fats" Snider
18-10-4
.625
7-1-1 (1924)
1921-1924
Danny Salmon
17-14-1
.546
6-4 (1977)
1975-1977
Charles Hearn
11-10
.523
8-3 (1974)
1973-1974

In 1974, the Hueytown High wrestling team won the school's first state championship with the 4A State Title under the guidance of then head-wrestling coach, Tony Morton.[12]

The boys' baseball team has traditionally been among the state's strong programs including a state 4A Championship in 1976.[7]

The girls' softball team has won four state softball championships in six years with titles in 2005, 2006, and 2008 as a 6A school and 2010 as a 5A school.

Notable alumni

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "School Detail for Hueytown High School". National Center for Education Statistics.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Hueytown Historical Society
  3. Leech, Marie (2008-06-27). "Jeffco school board buys site for new Hueytown High". The Birmingham News. The Jefferson County Board of Education on Thursday bought 109 acres (44 ha) for the new Hueytown High School, to open in December 2010.
  4. Leech, Marie (2008-06-27). "Jeffco school board buys site for new Hueytown Highl=http://www.al.com/news/birminghamnews/metro.ssf?/base/news/1214554599111250.xml&coll=2". The Birmingham News. The Jefferson County Board of Education on Thursday bought 109 acres (44 ha) for the new Hueytown High School, to open in December 2010.
  5. Doster Construction Company, Inc. at www.dosterconstruction.com
  6. Toraine Norris, The Birmingham News 12/22/2010
  7. 7.0 7.1 Alabama State High School Athletic Association, AHSAA.com
  8. Hueytown High School Retrospect, 1922
  9. Hueytown High School Retrospect, 1924
  10. The Birmingham News, August 2003
  11. Hueytown High School Retrospect, 1959.
  12. The Bessemer News, February , 1974
  13. Hueytown High School Alumni Association Newsletter
  14. Hueytown High School Retrospect, 1953
  15. http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WilsBu00.htm
  16. Alabama Dept of Education
  17. Aldersey-Williams, H., (1992) World Design: Nationalism and Globalism in Design, New York: Rizzoli.
  18. 28th Annual Design Review, I.D. Magazine, Designers' Choice: IBM Personal Computer, 1982.
  19. Markis S., ″A 25-Year Trip on the Silicon Highway″ , The Edmonton Journal, August 26, 2006.
  20. Nussbaum, B., ″Hot Products: Smart Design is the Common Thread″, Business Week, June 7, 1993.
  21. Sakakibara, K., “IBM ThinkPad 700C Notebook Computer Case″, Centre for Design Management - London Business School, 1994.
  22. Dell, D.; Purdy, G., (1999) ThinkPad: A Different Shade of Blue, Indianapolis: Sams/Mcmillan.
  23. Metz, C., ″25 Years of PC Magazine: Year Eleven/1992″, PC Magazine, May 2, 2007
  24. Hamm, Steve, (2008) The Race for Perfect: Inside the Quest to Design the Ultimate Portable Computer, New York: McGraw Hill.
  25. Bruce, M.; Jennaker, B., (1998) Management of Strategic Alliances, Sakakibara, K., Chapter 4, New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  26. Golden, P., ″Big Blue's Big Adventure. Part 1″, Electronic Business, January 1999.
  27. Suttles, Aaron, Tuscaloosa News, December 17, 2008
  28. University of North Carolina, School of Medicine
  29. Robyn B. Litchfield, Montgomery Advertiser, 11/21/2010
  30. Downey, Mike (1993-07-26). "To Them, No. 28 Always Will Lead". Los Angeles Times. p. C1. One of his Hueytown high school classmates was Randy Hill, who later worked as part of a pit crew ...
  31. BaseballReference.com

External links

Coordinates: 33°26′47″N 86°59′31″W / 33.4464977°N 86.9919381°W