Springfield High School (Illinois)
Springfield High School is a public secondary school located in Springfield, Illinois, United States. It is built on top of a graveyard, the oldest of the three high schools in Springfield Public Schools District 186. The school draws mainly from the west side of Springfield.
While the school opened in 1857, the current building was opened in 1916. A number of notable alumni have called the school home, with the writer Vachel Lindsay being the most associated with the town, which featured prominently in his writings.
Building history and architecture
Springfield High School opened on 4 September 1857 in a small building on Market Street, now known as Capitol Avenue. It was located in this building for only a single school year before it moved to the Academy Building on South 5th Street near Monroe until 1864. In 1865, a $65,000 school building was completed for the high school and was located on 4th and Madison Street. Due to congestion, Central High School was built in 1897, but was already overcrowded by 1915.In 1915, plans were made to erect a new school in Forest Park. Once the site of a church and Hutchinson Cemetery, the church was gone, but there were still gravestones and remains that were moved to Oak Ridge Cemetery before construction could begin. The new school was completed in 1916.
There are four mosaics on the exterior walls of the building completed by Henry Chapman Mercer. The original molds are a part of the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works.
Academics
In 2008, SHS had an average composite ACT score of 22.0, and graduated 91.0% of its senior class. Springfield High School has not made Adequate Yearly Progress on the Prairie State Achievement Examination, which with the ACT, comprise the State of Illinois' assessment as part of the federal No Child Left Behind Act. The school, overall, did not meet AYP in mathematics, and two student subgroups failed to meet AYP in both mathematics and reading.Student life
Activities
29 student clubs are hosted at SHS, ranging from academic and foreign language to school spirit and philanthropic. Among the national organizations with chapters or affiliates at the school are Junior State of America, Best Buddies, and the National Honor Society.The school's scholastic bowl team finished fourth at the IHSA state championship tournament in 2007–08.
Athletics
Springfield High School competes in the Central State Eight Conference, and is a member of the Illinois High School Association, which governs most interscholastic athletics and competitive activities in Illinois. Teams are stylized as the "Senators".SHS sponsors interscholastic athletic teams for young men and women in basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, and track & field. Young men may compete in baseball, football, and wrestling, while young women may compete in cheerleading, softball, and volleyball.
The following teams have finished in the top four of their respective IHSA sponsored state championship tournaments or meets:
- Baseball: 2nd place 2nd place
- Basketball : 4th place ; 3rd place ; 2nd place ; State Champions
- Basketball : 4th place ; 3rd place
- Cross Country : 4th place ; 3rd place ; 2nd place
- Cross Country : State Champions ; 3rd place ; 4th place
- Golf : 4th place
- Golf : 2nd place
- Soccer : State Champions ; 3rd place
- Softball: 3rd place
- Tennis : 4th place
- Track & Field : 4th place ; 3rd place ; 2nd place
- Track & Field : 4th place ; 3rd place
Fine arts
The school has a marching band, which performs at home football games and at other local events, and two pep bands, which take turns playing at home basketball games. For the concert season there are three groups. There are also two jazz bands and a flute choir, along with a clarinet choir.
The school stages a play each autumn and a musical each spring. Recent musicals include Cats, created by Andrew Lloyd Webber, Legally Blonde,Hairspray,'' and "Beauty and the Beast."
PLATO (computer system)
The only remote PLATO III terminal was at Springfield High School. It was connected to the PLATO III system by a video connection and a separate dedicated line for keyboard data.Notable alumni
- Charles A. Bane was a prominent jurist and civil rights activist. He was nominated by President Richard Nixon to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, but never confirmed.
- Thom Bishop is an award winning songwriter, author, producer, playwright, and educator.
- Thomas A. Broady was a ragtime piano composer and performer.
- J. Edward Day was a lawyer and political appointee who served as Illinois State Insurance Commissioner before being appointed U.S. Postmaster General by President John F. Kennedy.
- Toy Dorgan is a former speed skater who placed 14th in the 3,000 meter event at the 1968 Winter Olympics. She later took up cross country skiing, winning the Australian national championship five times.
- John Porter East was a U.S. Senator from North Carolina.
- Ruth Ellis was the oldest known open lesbian, and a LGBT rights activist. Her life was the subject of a documentary, Living With Pride: Ruth C. Ellis @ 100. She formed the Ruth Ellis Center, a social service agency dedicated to helping LGBTQ teens and youth adults experiencing homelessness.
- Robert Fitzgerald is known for translating many Greek texts into the English versions that many consider the standard. From 1984–85, he was Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, the equivalent of Poet Laureate of the United States.
- Richard Fortman was a champion checkers player and authority on the game.
- Jerry Fry is a former Major League Baseball player, briefly playing for the Montréal Expos in 1978.
- William Howarth is a writer and professor at Princeton University. He studies the relationship between man and nature, especially as expressed in literature.
- Justin Knoedler was a catcher for the San Francisco Giants.
- Andrew Lam author and retinal surgeon
- Vachel Lindsay was a poet.
- William H. Luers is a career United States Foreign Service officer who served as United States Ambassador to Venezuela and Czechoslovakia. He later served as president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- James S. Martin Jr. was the NASA Project Manager for the Viking program.
- Jared Palomar is a bass player for the California-based band Augustana.
- Dave Robisch played professional basketball in both the ABA and NBA. His uniform number 40 is retired by the University of Kansas.
- Ducky Schofield is a former MLB player for the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants, New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, Boston Red Sox, and Milwaukee Brewers.
- Hiram Sherman was an actor, both on television, and on Broadway. He twice won a Tony Award.
- Edward Sternaman was a running back for the Chicago Bears. From 1920–32 he was the co-owner of the Bears with George Halas.
- Joey Sternaman was a professional football quarterback, playing most of his career with the Chicago Bears.
- N. Ronald Thunman served 35 years of active duty in the United States Navy, rising to the rank of vice-admiral. His work included Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Submarine Warfare and Chief of Naval Education and Training. Thunman was the commander of the first-year class of John McCain.
- Bob Trumpy is a former Pro Bowl tight end for the Cincinnati Bengals. He is currently a broadcaster with the NFL on Westwood One.
- Harlington Wood Jr. was a jurist and lawyer who served on the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois and United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. While working for the United States Department of Justice in 1973, he led negotiations that ended the Wounded Knee incident.