Holyoke High School

Holyoke High School is a public high school in Holyoke, Massachusetts, United States. Since 2015, the school, along with the district, has been in state receivership and through a series of changes in practices, such as innovative restorative justice disciplinary programs, has seen marked improvement in student retention and graduation rates.[6] In the 2017-2018 school year Holyoke High received higher combined SAT scores than the average for schools in Boston, Worcester, and Springfield.[7]

Holyoke High School
Address
Map
500 Beech Street

,
01040

United States
Coordinates42°12′00″N 72°37′27″W / 42.20000°N 72.62417°W / 42.20000; -72.62417
Information
TypePublic
Open enrollment[1]
Established1852[2]
School districtHolyoke Public Schools
PrincipalDana Brown
ReceiverAlberto Vázquez Matos
Faculty115.05 (FTE)[4]
Number of students1,566 (2020–21) [3]
Student to teacher ratio13.11[4]
Color(s)Purple & White    
MascotKnight
SAT average510 verbal
505 math
1015 total (2017-2018)[5]
Websitewww.hps.holyoke.ma.us/holyoke-high-school/

Holyoke High School, north campus

Overview

Holyoke High School is located in Holyoke just off of Interstate 391. Currently, there are approximately 1,300 students enrolled in the school in both divisions. The school colors are purple and white. The school song is "Hail, Holyoke", which was written by the high school's first band director Fred Grady in 1937 and dedicated to Dr. Howard Conant, a longtime principal who served the school for 35 years.[8][9]

Academy coursework will build upon the general education curriculum of math, science, and language studies with additional unique course offerings as well as internships and job shadowing opportunities in the field of a student’s choice.[10]

Juniors and seniors may also complete coursework at area colleges through the Dual College Enrollment program, including but not limited to Holyoke Community College, Springfield Technical Community College, Westfield State University, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.[11]

History

Top to bottom: The first dedicated high school building, constructed on Elm Street between Dwight and Suffolk in 1862; the G.P.B. Alderman-designed high school, used from 1898 to 1964 when the present building opened

Established in 1852 by the city, the school's first principal was Stephen Holman, a polymath engineer, lawyer, linguist, and educator who went on to found the Holyoke Machine Company and Deane Steam Pump Works, purchased the Holyoke Paper Company, and was credited as the first to introduce modern cost accounting into the paper industry.[2][12][13]

From 1872 to 1881, Holyoke High School was one of about a dozen New England schools which received students from the Chinese Educational Mission.[14] Upon returning overseas some of these students would go on to serve important roles in Qing dynasty China including, but not limited to, Shung Kih Ting,[a] class of 1880, who would eventually serve as acting deputy commissioner of the Chinese Maritime Customs Service,[15] and Chow Wan Tang[a] who graduated in 1881 and revisited Holyoke in 1908 as general manager of the Imperial Chinese Telegraph Administration.[16]

On January 21, 1924, the school hosted the first of a series of debates in the United States between feminists Adele Schreiber-Krieger of Weimar Germany and Helen Fraser of the United Kingdom, under the topic "That the Hope of Civilization Depends Upon the Continued Growth of Labor Parties Throughout the World" with Schreiber arguing for and Fraser countering.[17]

During a visit to Holyoke in 1916, former President and future Supreme Court Chief Justice William Howard Taft gave a lecture at the high school on the institution of the US presidency.[18] In 1969 the school was bestowed with the National Bellamy Award, presented annually to one school in the United States. Begun in 1942 by Margarette Miller, and named for Francis Bellamy, writer of the original pledge of allegiance, the award is given to a school each year which embodies the ideals of which the pledge aspires.[19] Although the award is annually presented by an independent organization, in recognition of the school's award, Holyoke High received an official citation from President Richard Nixon, on May 13, 1969.[20]

Athletics

The high school's mascot, the Holyoke Knights

The Holyoke High School has sports open to students for every season.[21]

Notable alumni

Notes

References

Further reading

External links