Hamilton High School (Hamilton, Ohio)

Hamilton High School
Address
1165 Eaton Avenue
Hamilton, Ohio, (Butler County) 45013
United States
Coordinates 39°25′31″N 84°34′42″W / 39.42528°N 84.57833°W / 39.42528; -84.57833Coordinates: 39°25′31″N 84°34′42″W / 39.42528°N 84.57833°W / 39.42528; -84.57833
Information
Type Public, Coeducational high school
Superintendent Tony Orr
Principal John Wilhelm
Grades 10-12
Color(s) Blue and White [1]         
Athletics conference Greater Miami Conference[1]
Sports Football,Basketball,Baseball,Wrestling,Tennis,Swimming, Soccer, Track & Field
Mascot Bulldogs
Team name Big Blue[1]
Rival Middletown High School (Ohio)
Accreditation North Central Association of Colleges and Schools [2]
Publication Blueprints (Literary Magazine)
Newspaper Big Blue Bulletin
Yearbook Heritage
Athletic Director Michael Dellapina[1]
Website www.hamiltonhigh.net

Hamilton High School is a public high school in Hamilton, Ohio. It is the only high school in the Hamilton City School District. It was the school in which then-President George W. Bush signed the No Child Left Behind Act on January 8, 2002.

The present building on Eaton Avenue opened as Taft High School in 1959. Taft served the west side of Hamilton while Garfield High School on Fair Avenue served the east. Both were consolidated to form Hamilton High in 1981 at Taft.

In 2002, a massive addition was built across the school's front, giving it new entrances, a new facade, a new library/media center, and six new classrooms. A new fine arts wing was finished in 2004. A recent bond issue approved the construction of a new gymnasium and to convert the old gym into a larger cafeteria. In 2012, the school began construction on the new gymnasium and lunch room. It was concluded in 2013, with a positive reception.

Hamilton had a high school at the corner of S. Second and Ludlow Streets downtown until 1915 when a new building was constructed at N. Sixth and Dayton Streets. The high school remained there until 1959, when Hamilton's population swelled and two high schools became necessary.

Notable Alumni

Ohio High School Athletic Association State Championships

Notes and references

External links

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