Milton High School (Georgia)

Milton High School
Address
13025 Birmingham Highway
Milton, Georgia 30004
United States
Coordinates 34°05′54″N 84°20′10″W / 34.09841°N 84.33621°W / 34.09841; -84.33621Coordinates: 34°05′54″N 84°20′10″W / 34.09841°N 84.33621°W / 34.09841; -84.33621
Information
Type Public
Motto PRIDE
Established 1921[1]
Oversight Fulton County School System
Principal Brian Jones[1]
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 2,009
Color(s) Red, white and navy blue
Mascot Eddie the Eagle
Nickname Eagles
Rival Roswell High School
Website www.miltonhighschool.com

Milton High School front lawn

Milton High School is a high school in Milton, northwest Fulton County, Georgia, United States. It has a long-standing rivalry with Roswell High School.

History

Milton High School was founded in the shadows of metropolitan Atlanta within the city of Alpharetta. It opened in 1921, serving all of the students of Milton County and including grades one through eleven. The school initially had no buses, school lunches, central heating, or plumbing. Its first principal was W.T. Harrison.

With the merger of Milton and Fulton counties in 1932, improvements began at a rapid pace.

Due to the initiative of the Fulton Farmers of America, a cannery operated during the summers on the Milton campus. An authentic log cabin, also an FFA project, still stands as a memorial.

The 1950s brought more positive changes, and the building of an elementary school allowed Milton to house only grades eight through twelve.

The addition of a concrete football stadium drew the entire community on Friday nights to cheer for the Milton Eagles. The stadium was later named the "Sonny" Hawkins stadium, after the teacher who tirelessly provided over 25 years of volunteering as the public address announcer.

The 1970s represented a time of tremendous economic and social transition for Alpharetta and Milton High School. A new cafeteria, library, and front office were added.

With Milton tapped as Fulton County's first comprehensive high school, in the 1980s, programs began for learners with all abilities and interests. A middle school was opened nearby to meet the specialized needs of students in grades six through eight, which left Milton as a grade 9-12 facility.

In the 1990s, an enlarged and modernized Milton High School (encompassing the MHS Center for the Arts, a new greenhouse, music facilities, and health/physical education facilities) established a stellar reputation for strong community ties, presenting a broad and relevant curriculum supported by state-of-the-art technology and a caring spirit. The school later added a state-of-the-art science wing, an enlargement of the school cafeteria, and renovations to the front office.

In the 1997-98 school year, Milton was named a Georgia School of Excellence and a Blue Ribbon Nominee. In the 1998-99 school year, U.S. News & World Report named Milton an outstanding high school and a model of excellence.

Milton continued to be a vital part of the Fulton County School System, characterized by economic and geographic diversity. This sprawling comprehensive high school became a unique and warm blend of the old and new.

With the new millennium came increasing numbers of students and new ideas about how best to serve young people whose adult lives would be spent in the 21st century. Unlike the schools which prepared graduates of the 1930s and 1940s for jobs right out of high school, Milton was challenged to prepare students for a rapidly changing world. Its need to expand again was in conflict with its landlocked campus in the heart of Alpharetta. After much discussion, the Fulton County Board of Education decided to build a new school in a new location.

In the 2005-2006 school year, Milton High School moved from its original location in downtown Alpharetta to a new site adjacent to the Northwestern Middle School and Crabapple Crossing Elementary in the city of Milton.

The old Milton High School facility now serves as the home of Independence High School, an alternative school serving north Fulton County.

Today

Today, Milton High School teaches grades 9-12, and started the 2008-09 school with 2,314 students. Enrollment grew to over 2600 students for the fall of 2010.[2]

Once the new building was opened, Milton adopted an innovative academy system that allowed students to choose a "track" to personalize their education. In 9th grade, all students take the Freshman Academy. From 10th grade on, students chose among the Math and Science Academy, Social Sciences Academy, and Arts and Humanities Academy. Each academy contained the courses required for graduation, taught in a way similar to the academy's particular theme. This model was done away with after just two years of use, and Milton went back to the traditional system.

Milton offers a number of Advanced Placement courses, including AP Biology, AP Calculus AB & BC, AP Drawing, AP Chemistry, AP 2D Design, AP 3D design, AP Environmental Science, AP French, AP Economy, AP Gov/Politics, AP Human Geography, AP Japanese, AP Language & Composition, 12th Grade AP Literature, AP Macro, AP Music Theory, AP Physics 1&2&C, AP Spanish, AP U.S. History, and AP World History.[3]

Following years of service as principal at both the old Milton High School campus and the new campus, Principal Ron Tesch retired after the 2009-2010 school year, but returned as interim principal for the 2014-2015 year after Cliff Jones moved to the administrative side of the Fulton County School System. Brian Jones (no relation to Cliff Jones) is the current principal.

Student, staff and school awards

In 2008-09 Milton's Teacher of the Year was Meredith "Academic Maturity" Reddy (Language Arts), who was also the Fulton County Teacher of the Year. Employee of the Year was Bev Bailey.

In 2009, Newsweek magazine named Milton High School #307 in its annual list of 1,500 top-ranking public high schools in the nation. Seven other Fulton County schools also made the list, which represents the top 6% of US schools.[4]

Milton was the only high school in Georgia to receive the prestigious "No Child Left Behind - Blue Ribbon Schools" distinction for 2008, the US Department of Education announced. Schools must demonstrate dramatic improvement in a school environment with significant populations of students from disadvantaged backgrounds or score in the top 10 percent on state assessments. Milton was recognized for its high achievement on assessments.

Principal Ron Tesch credited Milton's quality of teachers and the school's culture for academic excellence as keys to its success. "To steal from the real estate motto, 'location, location, location' - at Milton, it's 'academics, academics, academics,' Tesch said. "We have such wonderful teachers - truly, the finest in the nation - who really look for ways to unlock students' potential. They do whatever it takes to help students succeed."

Tesch also acknowledged the community's support of the school. "The Milton community really values education, high standards and rigor. When we announced the award, everyone was jubilant. You could feel the pride throughout the school. Our teachers and students know the significance of this kind of award and what it means. Parents are stopping me in the hall to say how proud they are and what it means to the community." Tesch and assistant principal Cliff Jones attended a special awards ceremony on October 20–21 in Washington, D.C. to accept the award.

The arts at Milton

Band program

The Milton Band includes the Milton High School marching band, two jazz ensembles, a jazz combo, three concert bands, a percussion ensemble, and the Milton Indoor Drumline. The marching band has competed in many regional competitions. They have received many awards, and had the honor of participating in the London New Year's Day Parade in 2000. In recent years, the Wind Ensemble has received invitations to perform at the University of Alabama and the University of Georgia. The Milton Band is under the direction of Chris Shumick, with percussion directed by John Herndon. Milton's indoor drumline has won regional and national awards as well. In 2010, 2011, and 2012, the MID was one of the finalists in the WGI Championships in Dayton, Ohio. The marching band participated in New York's Veteran's Day Parade in 2014.

Choral department

Choral music was added to the curriculum in 1951. The choral program consists of three choirs.

The Milton choirs consistently receive Superior ratings in Performance and Sight-Singing at the Georgia Music Educators Large Group Performance Evaluation, as well as at other festivals across the south. They have performed at Carnegie Hall in New York City three times. The groups have also performed in Honolulu, Hawaii; Orlando, Florida; and Gatlinburg, Tennessee.

All three choirs perform three times per year at the Milton High School auditorium, in the fall, winter, and spring. Various other group and solo performances occur during the year.

Students have been selected to participate in Georgia Music Educators Association All-State Chorus, the Governor's Honors Program, District Honor Chorus, American Choral Director Association Honor Choruses, Spivey Hall Honor Choruses, and other honor choirs. Students from Milton have gone on to study music and participate in college music programs including Belmont University, Columbus State University, Georgia Southern, Louisiana State University, Mercer University, Shorter College, Stetson University, and the University of Georgia.

Drew Bowers has been the Director of Choral Activities at Milton High School since his appointment in 2007. He conducts the Chorale, Women's Select, and Concert Choir, and teaches Advanced Placement Music Theory.

Drama department

Milton has an award-winning theatre program led by Larry Smith, David Hopkins and Sim Jones. Milton Theatre won the Georgia Theatre conference with their production of the musical Starmites and came in second in the State One Act Competition with their play Peter and the Starcatcher. They are also the only high school in the country with a "Cirque" program, brought to the school by director Larry Smith.

Orchestra program

The Milton High School Orchestra is directed by Richard Bomba. He is the longest tenured member of the fine arts department at Milton High School. Since his arrival, the orchestra has grown from 32 members to over 110. The orchestra program consists chamber, Sinfonia, and concert orchestras. The orchestras perform individually and together at least four times per year. The orchestra often arranges a full symphony concert with members from the elite MHS Band program. The orchestra also hosts multiple ensembles and quartets and encourages them (and individual players) to perform throughout the local area in an outreach program. The MHS Orchestra has been invited to the National Orchestra Festival, and has won the Smoky Mountain Music Festival. Individuals in the MHS orchestra have earned chairs at All-State, ASYO, MYSO, LSO, FCHO, and Spivey Chamber Orchestra, including first chair placement on several occasions. In 2016 they graduated the bassist Jan, who was named salutatorian, along with violinist Agni, who was named valedictorian.

Athletics

Team GHSA State Champions

As of the 2014 school year, Milton has won 36 state championships in 13 sports and activities. The girls' lacrosse program has won the most state titles (eleven).[5][6] The boys' program with the most GHSA State Championships is baseball (three).

GHSA State Champions

Sports:

Activities:

Individuals:

GHSA State Competition results (team and individual) can be found on the GHSA archive page.[13]

Notable alumni

References

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