- Clay-Chalkville High School
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Clay-Chalkville High School Location Clay, Alabama, United States Information School type Public School district Jefferson County Board of Education Principal Steve Laney Grades 9-12 Color(s) Navy and Silver Nickname Cougars Clay-Chalkville High School (CCHS) is an United States high school which was established on August 14, 1996 in Clay, Alabama. The school is the largest of 17 high schools operated by the Jefferson County Board of Education, the second-largest of 127 school systems in the state of Alabama.
Contents
Facilities
It is a one-level building with 53 classrooms, four computer labs, four science labs, a choral room, a band room, a media center, a fine arts room, a video production studio, a lunch room, practice and spectator gymnasiums, a 650 seat auditorium, and 766 spaces for parking. The school has fields for baseball, softball, football, and practice. Stadium seating was removed from the old Shades Valley High School and repaired for Clay-Chalkville High. The 9,880 sq. ft. media center is a focal point for the school and includes a time capsule placed by the Class of 2001. It overlooks an outdoor amphitheatre through a curved wall of windows. The auditorium has a fully complemented stage with fly tower and scene room. Clay Chalkville was founded in 1996 to cut back on overcrowding at Hewitt-Trussville High and Junior High Schools which resulted in overcrowding in the school they built to reduce overcrowding. The school opened it doors on August 6 of that year under the direction of Principal Lawrence C. Carter. Clay Chalkville Middle School opened the same day. The current principal is Mr. Steve Laney with Ms. Kim Weaver, Mr. Steve Shankles, Mrs. Michelle Hayes, and Mrs. Julianna Coleman serving as Assistant Principals and Administrator of Curriculum.
Demographics
The average class size is 17.9 students.
Sports
Athletics began at Clay-Chalkville when the school opened in 1997. When football head coach Toney Pugh left in December 1998 to start Oak Mountain High School, former Erwin and Mortimer Jordan head coach Hal Riddle came in to lead the Cougar football program. In his first season, 1999, Riddle carried the Cougars to the Class 6A football Super 6 at Legion Field, beating Robert E. Lee-Montgomery, 30-27, in overtime for the school's first Alabama High School Athletic Association state championship. A first-half field goal by Matt Briggs stands as the longest field goal in the Class 6A title game. The Cougars' biggest rivalry began the same season, as CCHS beat Hewiit-Trussville High School in their first meeting. In 2003, head coach Jeff Mauldin and the Cougars' baseball team won the 6A state championship in Montgomery. The Cougars returned to the title game in 2005 and 2006, but finished second. The boys' tennis team placed first in the Jefferson County Tournament in the past two years. Women's and men's basketball teams have also advanced to post season games throughout the school's short history.[citation needed] The school also has volleyball, cross country, cheerleading, wrestling, softball, soccer, golf and outdoor track and field. Cougar Athletics online
Choir
There are two choirs in Clay-Chalkville Chamber and Concert. Chamber Choir recently performed at AMEA in Tuscaloosa AL.
Band
The Cougar Band. Clay-Chalkville has two bands (concert and symphony band) and a marching band that both bands participate in.
Controversy
In 2011, The Clay-Chalkville football team, undefeated at the time, was caught up in controversy when they were accused of using an ineligible player for the first nine games and therefore had to forfeit those games. They attempted to appeal the forfeits to the Alabama High School Athletic Association, but the appeal was denied. They later took the case to the Jefferson County Circuit Court, where they were granted an injunctive relief and put them back in the AHSAA playoffs. However, Etowah County has attemped to challenge the court's decisions in order to put Gadsden City, who was the 4th seed in region 7 when Clay-Chalkville forfeited the wins, back in the playoffs. A hearing is yet to be heard.
External links
Coordinates: 33°41′44″N 86°36′06″W / 33.69544°N 86.60172°W
Categories:- High schools in Alabama
- Educational institutions established in 1996
- Schools in Jefferson County, Alabama
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