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St. Michaels Middle/High School

Coordinates: 38°46′48″N 76°12′57″W / 38.7799°N 76.2159°W / 38.7799; -76.2159
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St. Michaels Middle/High School
Address
Map
200 Seymour Avenue

,
21663

United States
Information
TypePublic high school
School districtTalbot County Public Schools
PrincipalTheresa Vener
Grades6-12
CampusModern picturesque facility in a friendly small town
WebsiteSMMHS website

St. Michael's Middle and High School (SMMHS) is a seven-year public middle school / high school in St. Michaels, Maryland, United States, in Talbot County. It is one of two public high schools in Talbot County along with Easton High School.

Overview

The school is located on the Eastern Shore of Maryland in the town of St. Michael's, MD, a waterside fishing port on the Chesapeake Bay. The school is on Maryland Route 33, just west of Easton, Maryland and U.S. 50.

Students

St. Michael's graduation rate has fluctuated a bit over the years, however that may be attributable to the school's small size. In 2007 the school graduated 88.46%, up from 78.69% in 2004.[1]

Like the graduation rate, the school population has been fluctuated over the past several years, with a total of 471 attending in 2016. The school's population peaked in 2000 with 506 students, with a low of 221 in 1993.

Court Case

In Max Brennan v. Board of Education of Talbot County et al., U.S. District Judge George L. Russell III sided with the plaintiff, a transgender male student. Brennan had previously been only authorized to use specified gender neutral bathrooms in his school, St. Michaels Middle/High School. Once a 4th Circuit Court ruling deferred to Obama-era guidance on school bathroom usage, Brennan was then allowed to use the male bathrooms, but not the locker rooms. However, on March 12, 2018, the judge ruled that this amounts to discrimination and "harms his health and well-being...[as the policy] does not apply to anyone else at the high school, and marks him as different for being transgender."[2] Litigation in this case is still ongoing, and no changes to policies have been made.

Sports

State Champions

  • 2017 - Baseball
  • 2013 - Tennis
  • 2012 - Tennis
  • 2011 - Baseball
  • 2011 - Tennis
  • 2010 - Baseball
  • 2010 - Tennis
  • 2008 - Baseball
  • 2001 - Baseball[3]
  • 2010 - Wrestling, Jordan Gowe, Individual State Champion (171 lbs.)
  • 1984 - Wrestling, Ray Carpenter, Individual State Champion[4]
  • 1975 - Boys' Soccer[5]
  • 1974 - Boys' Soccer

State Finalist

  • 2018 - Baseball
  • 2003 - Softball[6]
  • 2000 - Baseball
  • 1997 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1984 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1983 - Girls' Field Hockey[7]
  • 1982 - Girls' Field Hockey
  • 1981 - Girls' Field Hockey
  • 1976 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1965 - Boys' Cross Country[8]

State Semi-Finalist

  • 2016 - Baseball
  • 2002 - Boys' Soccer
  • 2002 - Softball
  • 2000 - Boys' Soccer
  • 2000 - Softball
  • 1999 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1999 - Softball
  • 1998 - Softball
  • 1987 - Girls' Field Hockey
  • 1984 - Girls' Field Hockey
  • 1982 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1981 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1979 - Boys' Soccer
  • 1977 - Boys' Soccer

Notable alumni

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Marimow, Ann. The Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/public-safety/federal-judge-sides-with-transgender-teen-in-challenge-over-school-locker-rooms/2018/03/13/562a08a6-26de-11e8-bc72-077aa4dab9ef_story.html?wprss=rss_crime. Retrieved 13 March 2018. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ MPSSAA Baseball
  4. ^ MPSSAA Wrestling
  5. ^ MPSSAA Boys' Soccer
  6. ^ MPSSAA Softball
  7. ^ MPSSAA Girls' Field Hockey
  8. ^ MPSSAA Boys' Cross Country

38°46′48″N 76°12′57″W / 38.7799°N 76.2159°W / 38.7799; -76.2159