Quitman County High School


Quitman County High School is a public high school in the Quitman County School District of Georgetown, Quitman County, Georgia. It was established in July 2009 as the newest, and one of the smallest, high schools in the U.S. state of Georgia. As the newest addition of the K-12 school format that the school district has adopted, it now serves students in grades nine through twelve.
The school is located on Kaigler Road in Georgetown off of U.S. Hwy. 82. Because of the hill-like topography of the school's location, its students have nicknamed it according to their mascot, "Hornet Hill," and the school itself the "Hornet Nation."

History

Since the burning of Georgetown High School in the 1970s, the Quitman County School District had shared its students with the nearby Stewart County High School in Lumpkin.
In 2007, the Quitman County Board of Education began partnering with community members and leaders to acquire funds for building the new school. Because of the city's lack of commercial revenue and its overwhelming dependence on property and sales taxes, this placed an enormous toll on the city/county's populace.
In 2009, construction of the new high school was completed under the administration of Superintendent William D. Burns.