Jump to content

South High School (Springfield, Ohio)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Sansonymouse (talk | contribs) at 00:03, 17 December 2018 (Removed out of place word (school) and fixed capitalization in 'YouMedia'). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

South High School
Location
Map
Information
TypePublic
Color(s)Blue & Gold
Information1911 - 2008

South High School, formerly Springfield High School, is a building that housed a public high school in Springfield, Ohio. It was one of two high schools in the Springfield City Schools district, the other school being North High School. Thanks to a large state grant, local donations, and the School District's investment, in 2015 it reopened as the Springfield Center of Innovation: The Dome. It is still owned and operated by the Springfield City School District (SCSD). SCSD operates the CareerConnectED Center and John Legend Theater within the building, and leases space in the Dome to the Global Impact STEM Academy and to Clark State Community College.

Dayton, Ohio architect Albert Pretzinger's design of the school was modeled after the Library of Congress. When it was built around 1911, it was the sole high school in Springfield. North High School was built in the 1960s due to the rising population of the city, and the old high school was renamed South.[1]

The mascot was the Wildcat. The school colors were Gold and Navy Blue.

North and South High School merged into Springfield High School in 2008. The two schools moved into a new building behind the old North High School. The North High School building was demolished that year, while the South High School building currently stands housing a YouMedia center for grades 9-12 after school and Global Impact STEM Academy.[2]

Athletics

  • Springfield South and North had a cross-town rivalry; South has beaten North in 4 of their past 25 meetings in basketball.
  • The 2002-2003 Springfield South football team went to the Elite Eight in the 2002.
  • Tim Glass was a first-round draft choice of the Cleveland Indians in the 1976 Major League Amateur Draft.[3]
  • Dee Miller was a sixth-round draft choice (196th overall) of the Green Bay Packers in the 1999 NFL Draft.
  • Fred Foster played in the NBA for 11 years after a college career with Miami University.
  • Ron Burton played professional football after a college career at Northwestern. The Burton Foundation in Boston is one of the most successful and long-running youth services program in the U.S.

References

  1. ^ Stafford, Tom (July 24, 2011). "'61 Springfield graduates reflect on North-South split". Springfield News-Sun. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  2. ^ Bruner, Bethany (Jan 7, 2012). "Old school sites cost city district thousands each year". Springfield News-Sun. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  3. ^ "1976 Cleveland Indians Picks in the MLB June Amateur Draft". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 1 October 2013.