- Mount Pleasant High School (Wilmington, Delaware)
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Mount Pleasant High School Established 1830 Type Public Principal James Simmons, III Students 908 Grades 9–12 Location Wilmington, Delaware, USA Coordinates 39°46′21″N 75°30′17″W / 39.7726°N 75.5046°WCoordinates: 39°46′21″N 75°30′17″W / 39.7726°N 75.5046°W District Brandywine School District Colors Green, White and Gold Mascot Green Knights Yearbook The Green Leaf Website brandywineschools.org/mphs/site/default.asp Mount Pleasant High School is a public secondary school located in Wilmington, Delaware. The current principal is James Simmons III. There were 908 students enrolled in the fall for the 2008-2009 school year.[1] It is the only public high school in Delaware which offers the International Baccalaureate program.
Contents
History
In 1830, a law was passed in Delaware to establish the first public school system. One of the first schools built was Mount Pleasant, located on an acre of land which is now part of Bellevue State Park.[2] Joseph Orr sells a lot on September 22, 1830 to the School Committee of School District #2 (note: School District #1 was Naamans Creek, now the Claymont Stone School). The original Mount Pleasant schoolhouse still stands today. When William DuPont Jr. remodeled Woolton Hall, now called the Bellevue Mansion, he also changed the exterior of the Mount Pleasant schoolhouse from stone to its present Colonial Revival style.
1830 - Mount Pleasant schoolhouse opens
1838 - Mount Pleasant Methodist Church opens (now the Mount Pleasant Meeting House on Philadelphia Pike)
1865 - Mount Pleasant school moves to new location at 1010 Philadelphia Toll Pike, just across the street from the Mount Pleasant Methodist Church
1932 - Mount Pleasant school moves to a much larger location on Duncan Road (now the residence of Mount Pleasant Elementary School)
1958 - Mount Pleasant High School opens on Washington Street Extension[3]
In 1978, the Mount Pleasant Special School District and other school districts in Delaware dissolve due to desegregation. Mount Pleasant High School becomes a part of the New Castle County School District. Quinton Sterling becomes the first African-American principal of the high school. In 1981, the New Castle County School District found it difficult to function as a large district which resulted in the formation of four separate school districts (Brandywine, Christina, Colonial and Red Clay Consolidated). Dr. Frank J. Furgele becomes the superintendent of the newly formed Brandywine School District.
The school celebrated their 175th anniversary[4] in a grand series of events during homecoming weekend which included the inaugural Mount Pleasant Hall of Fame on October 14 and 15, 2005.[5] The school now has a Hall of Fame induction ceremony every other year.
HALL OF FAME CLASS OF 2005 - Inductees were Quinton Sterling, Andy Grundberg, Bill Crowthers, Soddy Limmina, and Dave Sokola.
HALL OF FAME CLASS OF 2007 - Inductees were Lisa McDowell, Charles Frampton, John Michalcewiz, Vince Meconi, Wayne Pollari, and Joseph Ambrosino.
HALL OF FAME CLASS OF 2009 - Inductees were Arthur Colbourn, John Crum, Carol Hoffecker, Rodney Lambert, John Jancuska, Jesse Morris, and Bob Huber.
HALL OF FAME CLASS OF 2011 - Inductees were Frank Giamboy, Kathleen Jennings, Tom Lapinski, Ron Mask, William Schwartz (Mike Rossi), and David Swayze.
Principals of the High School: E. Raymond Schwinger (1947–1958), Kenneth E. Michael (1958–1962), Charles H. Bomboy (1962–1965), John Michalcewiz (1966–1978), Quinton F. Sterling (1978–1991), Thomas F. Lapinski (1991–2000), Administration Transition Period (2000–2001), Dennis A. Runyan (2001–2003), Gregg P. Robinson (2003–2006), Michael H. Pullig (2006–2008), James L. Simmons III (2008–present).[6] Jim Simmons, Class of 1984, is the first alumnus of Mount Pleasant to be appointed principal.
Academics
In 2008, Mount Pleasant ranked #602 in Newsweek's top 1300 high schools, which uses a ratio of the number of AP, IB and/or Cambridge tests taken by all students at a school divided by the number of graduating seniors.[7] In the spring of 2008, 220 students took IB exams and more than 100 students took AP exams.[1] Mount Pleasant's Academic Bowl team placed 2nd in the 2008 Comcast Academic Challenge of Delaware.[8]
Activities
Mount Pleasant is also the home of WMPH 91.7 FM, which began broadcasting on October 1, 1969, and was Delaware's only public high school radio station until McKean began broadcasting at WHMS 88.1 FM in 1998.[9]
Mount Pleasant also hosts the only completely student-run Relay for Life in the region. Over the past 5 years, over $150,000 has been raised for the American Cancer Society through this event.[10]
Mount Pleasant's chapter of the Technology Student Association has been recognized for the school's contributions to the TSA/ACS Service Project through Relay for Life. The former national president of TSA, Peter Andrews, is an alumnus of Mount Pleasant.[11]
Mount Pleasant puts on a spring musical every year. The 2009 production was Damn Yankees starring Jordan Weagraff and Melinda Murphy and the 2008 production was The King and I starring Phoebe Rowe and Cedrick Yancey. The 2010 production was Footloose starring Jordan Weagraff and Emily Ozer.
References
- ^ a b "Mount Pleasant High School - School Profiles". Delaware State Department of Education. http://profiles.doe.k12.de.us/SchoolProfiles/School/Default.aspx?checkSchool=196&districtCode=31.
- ^ "Mount Pleasant School". http://archives.delaware.gov/markers/ncc/NC-170.shtml.
- ^ "Mount Pleasant Class of 1959". http://www.clintdantinne.com/mphs/alumni/index.aspx#1959.
- ^ "Mount Pleasant 175th Anniversary". http://www.clintdantinne.com/portfolio/wmph/page2/#historical.
- ^ "Mount Pleasant Hall of Fame". http://www.clintdantinne.com/portfolio/wmph/page2/#hof.
- ^ "Mount Pleasant High School History". http://www.clintdantinne.com/mphs.
- ^ "America's Top Public High Schools 2008". Newsweek. 2008-05-17. http://www.newsweek.com/id/39380/?s=Delaware&q=2008/rank/1.[dead link]
- ^ "Academic Bowl". http://www.mphsknights.com/activities/academicbowl/index.aspx.
- ^ "WMPH History and Documents". http://www.clintdantinne.com/wmph/history.
- ^ "Relay for Life". http://mphsknights.com/relayforlife/index.aspx.
- ^ "National TSA Officers". http://tsaweb.org/National-Officers.
Topics Colleges and
universitiesSchools Athletic conferences • High schools • Charter schools • Private schools • Vocational and technical schools
Public schools Appoquinimink • Brandywine • Caesar Rodney • Cape Henlopen • Capital • Christina • Colonial • Delmar • Indian River • Lake Forest • Laurel • Milford • NCC Votech • Polytech • Red Clay • Seaford • Smyrna • Sussex Technical • Woodbridge
Categories:- High schools in New Castle County, Delaware
- Educational institutions established in 1830
- Public high schools in Delaware
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