Orange County High School
Orange County High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
201 Selma Road Orange, Virginia United States | |
Coordinates | 38°14′43.5″N 78°5′47″W / 38.245417°N 78.09639°WCoordinates: 38°14′43.5″N 78°5′47″W / 38.245417°N 78.09639°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Established | 1952 |
School district | Orange County Public Schools |
Principal | Kelly Guempel |
Asst. Principal |
Todd Satterwhite Sherry Doane Eugene Williams |
Gender | Coeducational |
Color(s) | Orange & Blue |
Mascot | Hornets |
Nickname | The Fighting Hornets |
Yearbook | The Golden Horseshoe |
Website | http://ocps-internet.ocss-va.org/ochs/SitePages/index.aspx |
All data from school website/handbook. | |
Orange County High School in Orange, Virginia |
Orange County High School is a high school for children from grades nine to twelve located in Orange, Virginia.
History
Dedicated on November 9, 1952 at an approximate cost of US$1,150,000, Orange County High School combined students from the Orange & Unionville High Schools, and the Barboursville & Gordonsville Junior High Schools. In 1967, new classrooms, science areas, a cafeteria, and a library were added. In 1995 The Hornet Sports Center Field House was completed to provide students and the community at large access to a year round physical training center with a weight room, indoor track, basketball, volleyball as well as squash and handball courts. In autumn 2003, the school completed a multimillion-dollar multi-phased renovation, that now provides the faculty and student body population a state of the art cafeteria, library and completely renovated classrooms to include an acoustically integrated choral and music instrument practice rooms along with other improvements for student use and safety while adding new larger classrooms contained in a new wing of the school. Starting in 2013 a phase of renovation will be occurring where the Science lab facilities will be expanded and renovated
Principals
- Mr. J. Thomas Walker (1952—1955)
- Mr. William M. Trausneck (1955-1959)
- Mr. Juel M. Turner (1959-1963)
- Mr. Robert Jarvis (1963-1969)
- Mr. Lewis Close (1969-1984)
- Mr. Paul Cogar (1983-1987)
- Mr. Paul Douglas (1987-1989)
- Mr. Gerald Stover (1989—1999)
- Mrs. Gena Keller (1999—Dec 2005)
- Mr. Todd Wiedow (Jan to June 2006)
- Mr. Eugene Kotulka (2006—2010)
- Mr. Frank Leech (2010-2011)
- Mr. Doug Duncan (2011–2015)
- Mr. Kelly Guempel (2015–Present)
Notable Former Students
- Chris Haney, major league baseball pitcher
- Larry Haney, major league baseball player, Class of 1961
- Kevin Murphy, drummer for Tonic, Josh Gracin, and currently Randy Houser.
- Jake Hubbard, Soldier, Scholar, failed ballonist
- Shane Oehmke, World Record Holder for most times a name was mispronounced
- Giovanni "Italian Stallion" Paoluci, Most Free subs every handed out
- Max Yates, 1LT in the Army with the same capacity of that episode of Band of Brothers where Ross from friends was an LT.
- Kendall "Special K" Smith, Current world record holder in hotdogs swallowed without chewing in 60 seconds
- David Britten, most commonly known as the guy who showed up at halftime and helped the Mud Dogs win the Bourbon Bowl.
Sports
Orange County High School is in the AAA (moved up for 2011-2012 school year) Commonwealth District of the VHSL, and offers a variety of sports, including swimming, basketball, indoor track, outdoor track, gymnastics, football, golf, softball, tennis, cross country, field hockey, volleyball, wrestling.
The school has won three VHSL championships in track, one in girls' track, and two in boys' track. The school has also won two state championships in softball.
Controversy
From NBC29.com: Orange County High School held an event in celebration of black history on Thursday, March 12, 2015. The program included historical speeches and songs, but also included students reciting things like, "I was falsely harassed for selling cigarettes and was put into a choke hold eventually leading to my death. I can't breathe. My name is Eric Garner."
Students with the event wore T-shirts that read “Black Lives Matter,” and “I Can't Breathe,” referencing several high-profile police incidents from across the country.
Some parents were so upset that they kept their children home from school Monday. Angry parents say the production was political and inappropriate for the elementary-age students who took part.
“The real reason everyone is upset is because they've tried to tell children not to trust our police officers here in the community, not only here but across the country,” said Art Magner
On social media, people mentioned threats of violence and protesting at the schools. Additional law enforcement officers patrolled county schools on Monday to make sure everything went smoothly.
Press release from Orange County Public Schools:
The annual Black History program was presented at Orange County High School on Thursday, March 12, 2015. In its fifth year, it is a program designed by high school students to present information about Black History, up to and including current-day events. This year's program consisted of a wide range of performances, including recitals, a play, songs, dance, and poetry readings. Current day issues involving the deaths of young blacks were highlighted.
Following the program, School Board members received concerns regarding the content and delivery of the program and are working to respond to parents and members of the Orange County community.
We as members of the School Board regret that the nature of the program was offensive to some, but truly believe that there was no intent to offend or disparage anyone.
We acknowledge full support of Dr. Brenda Tanner, Superintendent of Orange County Public Schools. The School Board takes responsibility for the Black History Program.