Edina High School
Edina High School is a four-year public high school located in Edina, Minnesota, United States, a suburb of Minneapolis. The current student population is 2,740.
Edina High School was ranked as 197th best public high school in the United States according to U.S. News & World Report. Minnesota Department of Education certified Edina as a "Five Star School" and the U. S. Department of Education recognized it as a "National School of Excellence". Newsweek ranked the school #89 in their "List of the 1,200 Top High Schools in America", and the Grammy Foundation selected it as one of forty-two "Signature Schools" recognizing Edina's contributions to music education. Ninety-five percent of seniors go on to college and eighty-six percent finish in five years. 30% of Edina graduates responded in a recent survey that they conducted 10 years after graduation they had completed graduate school degrees or were pursuing graduate degrees.
A second high school, Edina West High School, opened in fall 1973, next to Valley View Junior High School, and Edina High School was renamed Edina East High School. Due to declining student enrollment, the two schools combined eight years later. Edina East closed in spring 1981, and the building eventually became the Edina Community Center, the district administrative offices and Welcome Center, and the home of Normandale Elementary school, while Edina West became Edina High School.
History
Before a high school opened in Edina, students looking to extend their education past eighth grade had to find their way down to the old Central High School at 4th Avenue and South 11th Street in Minneapolis. By the 1940s some Edina students in grades 10 through 12 attended private high schools. Of those who could not afford to attend a private high school, some were enrolled at St. Louis Park High School while many others were being "farmed out" to West and Southwest High Schools in Minneapolis. In 1941, Minneapolis schools raised their tuition for out-of-city students, and despite the increase, Edina residents voted to pay the increased tuition rather than build their own high school.During the mid-1940s, support for an Edina-Morningside junior and senior high school was increasing. However, World War II and the resulting shortage of building materials delayed construction of the Edina-Morningside Junior and Edina-Morningside Senior High School. But after the war, support for the new school began to resurface. Two sites for the new school had the most support. One was on the property that is currently occupied by the Edina Country Club near 50th Street and Wooddale Avenue and the other was at West 56th Street and Normandale Road. Although the 50th and Wooddale site was the center of the village's population at the time, the 56th and Normandale site was nearer to the school district's geographic center and was the eventual site chosen to build the new school.
The first high school to open in Edina, later known as Edina East, is now the site of the Edina Community Center and Normandale Elementary School. It was built as a combination high school/junior high. A $1.25 million school bond issue was passed in 1946 by the residents of Edina and ground was broken in October 1947. A year later the school was dedicated. It was not until the fall of 1949 that classes began and it was at that time that the student body chose the school colors and the school mascot, the Hornet. The school had 28 classrooms, 11 special rooms and laboratories, a library and a special radio room. In 1952, one year after the first class graduated, a gymnasium and auditorium were added to the building.
In the 1960s, the high school was becoming overcrowded. As a result, on October 20, 1970, a $9.255 million bond issue was approved by voters to construct a new high school attached to Valley View Junior High School. Construction of the new high school began on May 24, 1971 and the school was opened in the fall of 1972. The Edina East High School retained the "Hornets" and Edina West High School became the "Cougars".
In 1981 Edina East was closed and Edina West was renamed Edina High School. The newly unified school decided on the "Hornets" nickname. Part of the old high school building was converted to the Edina kindergarten center in 1987 and the Edina Senior Center. As of 2015, the building is used as a community center, housing the Normandale French Immersion K-5 elementary school, the school district's main offices and the school district's Welcome Center.
In November 2003, city of Edina residents passed an $85.8 million bond referendum to renovate all school facilities in the district, with the high school undergoing major renovations. Construction began on the high school in May 2004 and was completed in 2007.
Edina High School completed its $60 million renovations in September 2017. As a result, Edina High School now contains space to host grades 9-12 instead of grades 10-12.
Extracurricular
- The school yearbook is titled Whigrean.
- The school newspaper is Zephyrus, and is a member of the High School National Ad Network
- The school has a student-published literary arts magazine entitled Images
- Theater: In 2011, Edina was the first high school in Minnesota to perform on the Main Stage of the International Thespian Festival in over forty years, where they performed Anything Goes. In 2013, they brought "Fiddler on the Roof" to the Main Stage at the International Thespian Festival. In 2016, they were one of the first high schools in the nation to perform a Disney-sponsored show called "Peter and the Starcatcher", which they once again brought to the Main Stage.
- Debate: Edina has a nationally recognized debate team, which has been nationally ranked in the recent past
- Edina has a nationally recognized FRC Robotics Team: Team 1816, The Green Machine, which won a spot in the Hall of Fame at the 2019 Detroit Championships
- Edina High School has had an Ultimate Frisbee program since 2003 that competes both locally in the Minnesota Ultimate High School League, and nationally through USA Ultimate-sanctioned tournaments. The Boys & Girls teams have won a combined 6 State Championships. Girls Varsity in 2014 and 2019 and Boys Varsity in 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2019 .
- Edina's FIRST robotics team 1816 "The Green Machine" won the FIRST Championship Chairman's Award, the highest honor a robotics team can receive, in 2019 to be inducted into the FIRST Hall Of Fame.
Athletics
In 2005, Sports Illustrated ranked Edina as the 8th best sports program in the United States.
Key: E = Edina East, W = Edina West, * = Not included in MSHSL count
- Prior to the inception of the Minnesota State High School League football tournament, the Edina Hornets were ranked #1 in the state for the following years: 1952, 1953, 1955, 1957, 1960, 1965, 1966, 1969, 1971
- Denotes state record
- The 1999 state championship was a tie between Eden Prairie High School and Edina High School; this was the first tie at a state championship in Minnesota
Demographics
Awards
History teacher Lonni Skrentner was selected Minnesota History Teacher of the Year in 2004 by the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. She is currently serving on the Edina School Board. 72% of Edina High School teachers hold advanced, specialist, or doctoral degrees.In 2012, English Teacher Jacqueline Roehl was selected Minnesota Teacher of the Year.
In 2015, The School Yearbook Program, Windigo, received the National Program of Excellence Award from Jostens.
Notable alumni
Business
- Roy J. Bostock, business executive
- Robert Bruss, lawyer, real estate broker, author, and newspaper columnist
- Dave MacLennan Current CEO of Cargill Edina-East
- Brian J. Dunn, former CEO of Best Buy
- Ron Johnson, former CEO of J.C. Penney, former Senior Vice President of Retail Operations at Apple Inc.
Politics
- Ron Johnson, Current Republican Senator of Wisconsin
- Mary Anderson Pawlenty, Wife of Former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty
- Erin Matson, Action Vice President of the National Organization for Women
Sports
- Jeff Wright, former safety with the Minnesota Vikings
- Bill Nyrop, a professional hockey player who played for the Montreal Canadiens and was a member of three Stanley Cup winning teams
- Paul Siebert, Major League Baseball pitcher for Houston Astros, San Diego Padres, and New York Mets.
- Brian Burke, General Manager and executive VP, Toronto Maple Leafs and 2010 United States Men's Olympic Ice Hockey Silver Medalist Team
- Gord Hampson, retired National Hockey League player.
- Karl Mecklenburg, NFL Pro-Bowl linebacker with the Denver Broncos
- Greg Olson, former catcher for the Atlanta Braves
- Chris Perry, professional golfer with one PGA Tour victory
- Paul Ranheim, professional hockey player who played for Calgary, Hartford, Carolina, Philadelphia, and Phoenix from 1988 to 2003
- Jenny Schmidgall-Potter, American ice hockey player and gold medalist at the 1998 Nagano Games
- Hilary Lunke, American professional golfer
- Adam Goldberg, former NFL player
- David Ostlund, Semi-Professional World's Strongest Man competitor
- Kaylin Richardson, 2006 and 2010 Olympic skier
- Anders Lee, Professional Hockey Player; team captain of the New York Islanders beginning in 2018.
- Kieffer Bellows, Professional Hockey Player who currently plays for the New York Islanders and previously played for Boston University from 2016-2017.
Entertainment
- Stan Freese, tuba player, band director, and talent booking and casting director with The Walt Disney Company
- Julia Duffy, actress
- Barbara Peterson Burwell, Miss USA 1976
- David Bloom, news reporter, NBC
- Christopher Straub, contestant on the television show Project Runway; finished fifth in the sixth season
- Paris Bennett , contestant on the television show American Idol; finished fifth in the fifth season