Housatonic Valley Regional High School
Housatonic Valley Regional High School | |
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Cyclists in front of school, April 21, 2012 Felix Prole Virum | |
Address | |
246 Warren Turnpike Road Falls Village, Connecticut 06031 United States | |
Information | |
School type | Public Secondary |
Established | 1937 |
Opened | 1939 |
School district | Region One |
Superintendent | Patricia Chamberlain |
CEEB code | 070205 |
Principal | Jose Martinez, Ed.D. |
Staff | 90 |
Teaching staff | 48 [1] |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 421[1] (2013) |
Campus type | Distant Rural |
School color(s) | Blue and Gold |
Athletics conference | Berkshire League |
Mascot | Mountaineer |
Team name | Mountaineers |
Rival | The Gilbert School |
Accreditation | NEAS&C |
Publication | The Acorn |
Newspaper | The Northwest Corner |
Yearbook | The White Oak |
Communities served | Canaan, Cornwall, Kent, North Canaan, Salisbury, Sharon |
Feeder schools | North Canaan Elementary School, Cornwall Consolidated School, Kent Center School, Salisbury Central School, Sharon Center School, Lee H. Kellogg School |
Alumni | Steve Blass, John Lamb |
Website | http://www.hvrhs.org/ |
Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS) is a regional high school in the village of Falls Village in the town of Canaan, Connecticut in Litchfield County. The school currently has a student population of approximately 421 in grades 9 to 12.[1] It serves six towns: Sharon, Kent, North Canaan, Canaan (Falls Village), Salisbury, and Cornwall, including the unincorporated villages (such as East Canaan, Lime Rock and Lakeville) within those towns. It was established in 1939 as a result of a special act of the Connecticut General Assembly in 1937. It is the first regional high school in New England.
History
Prior to the opening of Housatonic Valley Regional High School, four of the six towns it currently serves each had its own high school. In the 1920s, William Teague, the state's rural supervisor of schools, suggested that Connecticut's sprawling Northwest Corner consolidate its public schools. In 1937, the Connecticut General Assembly authorized the formation of the first regional school district in the state (hence the name of the new district, "Regional School District Number One"). The newly formed school board purchased the 75-acre (300,000 m2) former Lorch farm at the junction of the Salmon Kill and the Housatonic River near the Canaan-Salisbury town line for $8,000. The school was subsequently constructed on that site, opening in the fall of 1939.
In 2001, the school facility expanded; adding a new agricultural education center, library, and updated science labs. The school facility includes one gymnasium, an auditorium, a cafeteria and dozens of classrooms. The school sat under the shadow of a white oak, from which the yearbook The White Oak takes its name. The historic White Oak was so badly damaged in a storm on Monday, July 5, 2004, shortly after the arrival of previous principal Dr. Gretchen Foster, that it was taken down.[2] The School also has two other courtyards: the Sophomore Courtyard located near the cafeteria, and the Faculty Courtyard (formerly Freshman courtyard). In 2007, HVRHS became the North American Champions of the Canon Envirothon competition.[3]
In early 2008, a plan was unveiled to renovate the former Clarke B. Wood Agricultural Center on campus. Part of that building, closed in 2001 after construction of a new Agriculture Center, has been turned into the artgarage, an afterschool activity center. The main part of that building was renovated into the Mahoney-Hewat Science and Technology Center, containing areas for extended curriculum activities needing more space than in the school's science laboratories and includes permanent space for the high school's robotics team (FIRST # 716), electric vehicle construction, a conference room with space for the Alumni Association activities, a business office for the 21st Century organization and various displays and supplies. The renovations were completed late 2012 and will serve not only high school students but all the CT Region One School District schools and students.
Curriculum
In addition to the standard high school curricula, the school offers a variety of elective classes including drawing, color and design, painting, photography, pottery, sculpture, wood technology, metal technology, drafting, and a wide array of courses in agriculture.
Athletics
Housatonic supports a large number of sports in comparison to other schools in its league. Housatonic has earned three state championships; Girls Track (1985 and 1988) and Division IX Golf (2007). Its notable alumni to continue on to professional sports careers are John Lamb and Steve Blass, both Major League Baseball pitchers for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Blass was drafted out of HVRHS, and pitched in the 1971 World Series. He is currently a sportscaster for the Pirates.
The Housatonic mascot is The Mountaineer. The school's colors are royal blue and gold, and it is a member of the Berkshire League (it is a member of the Pequot Uncas for football). The school has the following sports:
Boys' sports
- Fall
- Football
- Soccer (Berkshire League Champions 2005, Berkshire League Runners-up 2010, 2011, 2012)
- Cross-Country
- Winter
- Spring
- Baseball
- Track and Field
- Tennis
- Lacrosse
- Golf
Girls' sports
- Fall
- Soccer (Class S Runners-up 2014)
- Cross Country
- Volleyball (Berkshire League Champions 2007)
- Field Hockey
- Winter
- Basketball (Berkshire League Champions 2007-08)
- Swimming
- Alpine Skiing (CHAMPS 2007-08)
- Spring
- Softball
- Track
- Tennis
- Lacrosse
- Golf
Notable alumni
- Steve Blass, Former MLB player (Pittsburgh Pirates)
- John Lamb, Former MLB player (Pittsburgh Pirates)
References
- 1 2 3 "Housatonic Valley Regional High School". usnews.com. US News & World Report. 2013. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
- ↑ Waterbury Republican-American, 7 July 2004
- ↑ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_/ai_n19396264[]
External links
Coordinates: 41°56′15″N 73°21′34″W / 41.9375°N 73.3595°W