Hereford High School (Parkton, Maryland)

Hereford High School
Address
17301 York Road
Parkton, Maryland
USA
Coordinates 39°35′56″N 76°39′36″W / 39.59889°N 76.66000°W / 39.59889; -76.66000Coordinates: 39°35′56″N 76°39′36″W / 39.59889°N 76.66000°W / 39.59889; -76.66000
Information
Type Public high school
Established 1954
School district Baltimore County Public Schools
Principal Joseph Jira
Asst. Principal Constance Dean
Faculty 79[1]
Grades 9-12
Color(s)

Maroon and White

         
Mascot Bull
Website http://www.edline.net/pages/Hereford_High

Hereford High School is a four-year public high school located in the rural northern Baltimore County town of Parkton, Maryland, USA, as part of the Baltimore County Public Schools. The school was established in 1954.

The school's district is the Hereford Zone. The Hereford Zone covers 233 square miles (600 km2) and makes up over a third of Baltimore County by area.[2] Like those of most public schools in the region, Hereford students are transported by a busing system.

Hereford is notable for its agriscience program. It was the only one of its kind among the county's public high schools. Hereford's base feeder school, Hereford Middle School, also has a smaller agricultural program.[3]

School history

Agricultural High School opened in Sparks, Maryland in 1909 and had its first graduating class in 1912.[4] The name was changed to Sparks High School around 1920, and it was converted into an elementary school in 1953.[4] Hereford High School was established in Hereford, Maryland to replace Sparks High School in 1954.[4] It originally was home to a large population of farmers' children, due to the fact that at one time, Hereford's economy was almost entirely agriculture based. Since then, the disappearance of small farms and the growth of suburban housing development has caused the high school's agrarian roots to be carried on mostly by local tradition and its agricultural courses.

Departments

Academics

    As of 2014, the department offers courses in Chinese, French, Latin, and Spanish.

Additional Programs

[5]

Music

The music programs of Hereford include the following:

[6]

Along with its counterpart female choral group, Ladies Fare, the Bulltones perform at a variety of events, visiting schools in the vicinity as well as competing in notable locations such as Boston, Montreal, and Nashville.

In 2007, the Hereford High School Symphonic Band performed Chorus Angelorum by composer Samuel R. Hazo. The piece was commissioned for the Symphonic Winds section two years prior, after the death of Joey and Audrey Baseman (whose siblings and grandchildren were in the band).

Art

The National Art Honor Society chapter provides services such as face-painting for the homecoming dance, sponsorship of Youth Art Month activities, assistance at after-school art programs in the area, a House of Ruth art supply fund, and more. It also hosts the high school's annual art auction and show, which exhibits student work.

Theatre

Several levels of Theatre classes are available to schedule. The department usually produces two to three shows each school year. Previously, Hereford partook in the Cappies program in the Baltimore Area. But left the program in the 2012-2013 season. In the past, they have won awards for Best Musical (Pippin), Best Female Vocalist (Katherine Crowe in Pirates of Penzance and Julienne Gede in The Secret Garden), Best Cameo Actor (Gregory Kufera in Seussical), Best Costumes (Abby Urbanas, Steph Parks, Hannah Morgan in The Secret Garden and Kaitlin Philipp, Laura Pederson in Pippin), Lead Actress in a Musical (Nina Kauffman in "Seussical") and, under the direction in past years of Lee Waters, members of the theatre program as well as the program as a whole won a number of awards at the All State Theatre Festival, held annually at Magruder High School in Montgomery County. Because of this continually evolving program, the actors have been able to perform songs on the Hippodrome Stage. They have also won awards at the yearly trip to the Pennsylvanian Renaissance Festival. Other theatre related extracurricular activities include Improv Troupe and Drama Club.

Athletics

The mascot of Hereford is the bull, due to the region's rich agrarian history.

The Hereford Lacrosse team, under Brian King, won six state championships in a row ending in 2014

The school has won 50 state athletic championships including 20 since the year 2000. :[7] Hereford High School has won more State Championships than any other school in Baltimore county. (Hereford-46; Dulaney-28, Loch Raven-27, Towson-26) Hereford has also won the second most State Championships in the Baltimore Metro area. (Oakland Mills-56; Centennial-39; Glenelg-36).

Cross country

Hereford High is the host of the annual Bull Run Invitational Cross Country Meet, run in the end of September, which is one of the largest East Coast cross country running events, attracting over 100 schools from surrounding states. The course is noted for its hills, twists, turns and a steep ravine known as "The Dip", all making for what has been called "The Toughest Three Miles in Cross-Country" by John Dye of DyeStat.[9][10]

The 2009 Boys Hereford Cross Country team was involved in a well publicized dispute over the Baltimore County Cross Country Championships. After winning the title by several points over rivals Towson and Dulaney, another team's coaches notified officials that one Hereford runner had violated a national high school running rule by wearing black compression shorts with white stitching on each side. The Hereford team member, who had finished fourth overall, was disqualified, costing the team the championship. There was much debate over the fairness of this ruling, since minor violations to the national rules occur frequently, many of which were at the very same race. The disqualified runner, a Hereford senior, was featured in an interview article by the New York Times.[11]

In 2010, Hereford High School hosted and swept the championship meet with first-place finishes for both boys and girls. Freshman Erin Causey led the girls with a surprise top finish, followed by a matching performance by senior Mason Rivera. The girls seized their first state championship in five years, while the boys brought back championship cross country to Hereford that had been absent for thirty-two years. Varsity senior Sam Cornwell continued a family legacy, since his father, John, and uncles led Hereford to various cross country titles in the 1970s.[12]

Track and field

In May 2006, Hereford High School initiated a controversial appeal of a ruling in the Class 2A state championship in girls' track. The initial ruling had upheld the victory of Alison Smith in the 1600-meter race, denying a claim that Paralympic medalist Tatyana McFadden, a wheelchair athlete, had assisted team-mate Smith by pacing her. The consequential disqualification of McFadden and Smith by the Jury of Appeals of the State Games Committee cost defending champion Atholton High School the title.[13]

Football

The Hereford High School varsity football team is well known throughout the state of Maryland.[14] The Bulls have won three state titles in recent years (1997, 2001, 2002)

Tennis

In 2009 Hereford Tennis defeated one of Maryland's top tennis teams, Pikesville High, in the county tournament. Hereford ended Pikesville's string of victories that had lasted for over a decade. This was the Hereford tennis' first county championship.

Statistics

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Hereford High School". Public School Review LLC. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  2. "Open and Closed Session Minutes". Board of Education of Baltimore County, Maryland. January 13, 2004. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  3. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2009-10-21/news/0910200054_1_agriscience-hereford-middle-students
  4. 1 2 3 van den Beemt, Pat (August 1, 2006). "Pages from the past - History of Sparks High School preserved". North County News. Archived from the original on 2007-09-26. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  5. http://herefordhs.bcps.org/academics/index.html
  6. http://herefordhs.bcps.org/academics/music/index.html
  7. Hereford High School State Championships, accessed December 23, 2006
  8. MPSSAA Track & Field
    • Men's Bullpup: 1950-2008
  9. Flynn, Sean P. "Far From All Downhill; 'The Toughest Three Miles in Cross-Country'", The Washington Post, November 12, 2005. Accessed December 27, 2007.
  10. Kent, Milton. "Bull Run Invitational showcase running out of elite competition", Baltimore Sun, September 28, 2007. Accessed December 27, 2007. "The Bull Run has become one of the biggest races on the East Coast cross country calendar each year, attracting schools from four surrounding states and the District of Columbia.... This year, more than 100 schools, 2,600 runners, spectators and well-wishers are expected to pack Hereford with cars lined along York Road for miles, as the course, which twists and turns along steep hills and woods, is as much a part of the event as the competition itself."
  11. Hyman, Mark (December 13, 2009). "Losing by a Stitch to the Fashion Police". The New York Times.
  12. http://www.varsitysportsnetwork.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1440%3A2010-maryland-state-cross-country-championships&catid=32%3Asub-feature&Itemid=1790&75f4d8b54adb538582adf3f176a29eac=7e84ed924c889d681d525ba075997ce8
  13. Groundbreaking wheelchair athlete disqualified at state meet, USA Today, 2006-05-26
  14. Worgo, Tom. "Back on top: Hereford wins second straight state championship". North County News. December 4, 2002. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  15. "2006 Maryland Report Card". Maryland State Department of Education. June 15, 2006. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  16. "2006 Maryland Report Card". Maryland State Department of Education. June 15, 2006. Retrieved December 29, 2006.
  17. "A Final Salute; Sentry Set a Record at Tomb of the Unknowns", The Washington Post, March 7, 1996. pg. V.01
  18. "Parkton Marine killed in Iraq - '02 Hereford High graduate victim of suicide car bomb in Karabilah", Baltimore Sun, October 21, 2005
  19. "Second Hereford High Grad Killed in Iraq", Capital News Service (Maryland), December 2, 2005

External links

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