York High School (Virginia)

York High School
Address
9300 George Washington Highway
Yorktown, Virginia 23692
United States
Coordinates 37°12′14.5″N 76°30′1.8″W / 37.204028°N 76.500500°W / 37.204028; -76.500500Coordinates: 37°12′14.5″N 76°30′1.8″W / 37.204028°N 76.500500°W / 37.204028; -76.500500
Information
School type Public high school
Founded 1954
School district York County School Division
Superintendent Dr. Victor Shandor
Principal Dr. Shannon Butler
Staff Mrs. Stephanie Bolden, secretary
Grades 912
Enrollment 1,083 (2011-12)
Language English
Campus Suburban
Color(s)           Silver, Blue
Athletics conference Virginia High School League
Bay Rivers District
Region I
Mascot Falcon
Rival Tabb High School
Grafton High School
Bruton High School
Website Official site

York High School is a York County School Division high school located in Yorktown in York County, Virginia on U.S. Route 17 about 3 miles south of Yorktown.

The school was opened in 1954 and currently enrolls over one thousand students. Athletic teams compete in the Virginia High School League's AA Bay Rivers District in Region I. The school is the home of the school division's television station and offers television production courses in the curriculum. The school is also the home of the York River Academy (a charter school that focuses on collaborative education teaching computer repair, cabling, and web design) and is the YCSD site for the International Baccalaureate Programme.

York High School was once home to the most powerful high school radio station in the United States, WYCS 91.5.[1]

History

York High School opened in 1954 as the public school for grades 6 through 12 for the white children of the area, while the York County Training School in the Grafton area of York County would be used by black students. Before York High School opened, students attended other neighboring schools: Poquoson, Magruder in Williamsburg, and Morrison in Newport News, later to be known as Warwick High School. Black students in Grades 1 - 12 attended the newly constructed James Weldon Johnson School. York High School issued its first student yearbook, then titled "The York Bugle," in 1955.

From 1955 to 1970, an avalanche of over 5,000 pupils descended upon the York County school system. Families were moving out of the cities and many came from other states as some were returning after having been stationed in the county during their military service. Many changes to the schools came during that period as well. The year 1964 was the last year the school received funds from the district school levy. As of 1964, integration of YCSD schools began and the fall of 1967 marked the end of segregation. The James Weldon Johnson School, built on the same floor plan as YHS under the "separate but equal" emphasis during Segregation, became Yorktown Intermediate School.

Several additions were added to York High School within its first few years as the building would need to provide space for more than a thousand students in grades 6 through 12. As new schools opened, the school's population was reduced to consist of students of grades 9 through 12. The school served the entire county until Tabb High School opened in 1972 and Bruton High School opened in 1976.

Campus

The school has a gym called Pimmally Square.

Bailey Field

The athletic field was named in honor of B. Herman Bailey, a locally prominent family physician, who was widely considered to be a hero within the county. A successful doctor, Dr. Bailey was also an ardent supporter of YHS athletics for many years, providing sports physicals twice a year and was a faithful attendee of YHS football games.[2] The field is now used by 3 out of the 4 high schools in the county with Tabb High School and Grafton High School also playing their home football games there.

John P. Wornom Auditorium

The Auditorium is named for John P. Wornom, a York County native born in 1909 who owned a successful hardware store and was a long-time member of the York County School Board. An ardent supporter of childcare and education, Wornom worked to improve teacher pay and benefits, school facilities, and other measures to enhance the academic programs in the school division. He died from Lou Gehrig's disease on September 4, 1978.[2]

Accreditation

York High is fully accredited by the Virginia Department of Education[3] and has been accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools since 1966. [4]

Feeder patterns

The following elementary schools feed into YHS:[5] Seaford Elementary School, Yorktown Elementary School, Dare Elementary School. All residents zoned to Yorktown Middle School are zoned to York High School.

Athletics

York High has almost 20 varsity sports. These teams compete under the name, "The Falcons," and their colors are blue, silver, and white. The football team has had various successes over the past few years. York's athletic teams include: Academic Challenge, Baseball (AA State Champions 1989), Basketball-Boys, Basketball-Girls (AA State Champions 1986 and 1987; Bay Rivers District Regular Season Champions 2009-2010; Region I Champions 2009-2010), Cheerleading, Cross Country (AA State Champions 1996 and 1997), Field Hockey, Football, Golf, Soccer-Boys (AA State Champions 1994), Soccer-Girls, Softball, Swimming, Tennis-Boys (AA State Champions 1995, 1996, and 1997), Tennis-Girls (2012), Track-Boys, Track-Girls, Volleyball, Wrestling.

Band

The York High Band consists of a marching band during the fall, and a concert band during the winter and spring. The Marching Falcons are known for their achievements focusing on drum corps influenced performances and theatrical themes during their productions. The marching band consistently receives superior ratings, as does the concert band.

Notable alumni

References

  1. York High Alumni Association - WYCS 91.5 FM The United State's (sic) Most Powerful High School Radio Station Archived December 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. 1 2 www.yorkhighalumni.org
  3. "York Overview". Greatschools.net. Retrieved 2007-04-01.
  4. "School Overview". Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Archived from the original on December 29, 2006. Retrieved 2007-04-01.
  5. "York County GIS". York County, Virginia. Retrieved 2007-04-02.
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