Huntsville Independent School District
Huntsville Independent School District is a public school district based in the Hawkins Administration Building in Huntsville, Texas, United States.[1]
In addition to Huntsville, the district serves the city of Riverside as well as rural areas in central Walker County. The current Interim Superintendent position is Fred Rush (former HISD Superintendent).
Schools
[edit]High school
[edit]- Huntsville High School (Grades 9–12) [1]
Middle school
[edit]- Mance Park Middle School (grades 6-8)
- Originally built as Huntsville High School in 1950. This campus then became Huntsville Junior High. Later, the campus changed to Mance Park Middle School. Today it is a middle school campus with approximately 1300 students per year attending.[citation needed]
Elementary schools
[edit]- Huntsville Elementary (Grades PK3–5)
- Samuel W. Houston Elementary (Grades PK3–5)
- Scott Johnson Elementary (Grades PK3–5)
- Estella Stewart Elementary (Grades PK3–5)
Former schools
[edit]- Samuel W. Houston High School
- Samuel W. Houston Elementary School
- Huntsville Intermediate School (Grades 5-6)
- Gibbs Pre-K Center (Grades PK3-PK4)
Standardized dress
[edit]Huntsville ISD has standardized dress for grades 5–12 adopted by the board summer 2017.[2]
Demographics
[edit]By 2007 a Huntsville community report stated that over 50% of the HISD students are "classified as economically disadvantaged"; this is a higher percentage than the overall state percentage. As of 2007 over 18% of the students do not graduate from high school.[3]
Notable alumni
[edit]- Erin Cummings, Huntsville High School Class of 1995 - Television, film, and stage actress and former Kilgore College Rangerette.
- Charles Harrelson, criminal and father of Woody Harrelson, occasionally attended Huntsville High on and off from 1951-1953.[4]
- Richard Linklater, director, attended Huntsville High from 1975 to 1978 and heavily based Dazed and Confused (1993) on the experience.
- Rex Wayne Tillerson 69th United States Secretary of State from February 2017, to March 2018 under President Donald Trump.
Racial integration
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (January 2017) |
Until the 1960s, the school system, like many others in the United States, segregated schools by race, with white students attending one set of schools and non-white students attending another.
The district was fully racially integrated in 1968. Elementary schools began to be integrated before 1965. In 1965, students from non-white schools were allowed to apply to attend Huntsville High School instead of the non-white high school, Samuel W. Houston High School. One of the first African-American students to attend Huntsville High School was Joreen Kelly. She later became a teacher at Huntsville High School. The first African-American student to integrate Huntsville Elementary school was Janet Smither. (Now known as Janet Johnson)[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Rainwater, Mary. "HISD to hear update on high school construction." Huntsville Item. June 17, 2010. Retrieved on August 10, 2011.
- ^ "Standardized Dress Guidelines." Huntsville Independent School District. Retrieved on September 13, 2010.
- ^ Massingill, Ruth and Ardyth Broadrick Sohn. Prison City: Life with the Death Penalty in Huntsville, Texas. Peter Lang, 2007. ISBN 0-8204-8890-9, ISBN 978-0-8204-8890-5. 26.
- ^ Cartwright, Gary (November 2010). Dirty Dealing: Drug Smuggling on the Mexican Border & the Assassination of a Federal Judge: An American Parable. Cinco Puntos Press. ISBN 9781933693897.
- ^ Green, Stephen (2014-02-08). "Retired teacher helped integrate Huntsville High School". The Huntsville Item. Retrieved 2016-01-07.