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Hillhouse High School

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Principal
  
Glen Worthy

Team name
  
Academics

Phone
  
+1 203-497-7500

Founded
  
1859

Lowest grade
  
Ninth grade

Enrollment
  
980 (2013–14)

Website
  
hillhousecampus.org

District
  
New Haven School District

Number of students
  
980 (2013–2014)

Highest grade
  
Twelfth grade

Hillhouse High School

Address
  
480 Sherman Pkwy, New Haven, CT 06511, USA

Similar
  
Wilbur Cross High School, Hill Regional Career Hi, Hamden High School, Cooperati Arts and Humaniti, Amity Regional High Sch

James Hillhouse Comprehensive High School is the oldest public high school in New Haven, Connecticut. It is a part of New Haven Public Schools.

Contents

Hillhouse high school practice field


History

Established in 1859 as New Haven High School, Hillhouse High School is New Haven's oldest public high school. Originally located on Orange Street, it adopted its nickname, "The Academics," in acknowledgment of its close association with Yale University.

In 1863, the school was moved to a building at Orange and Wall Streets, which was replaced in 1871 by a new school.

The school is named in honor of James Hillhouse of New Haven, who represented Connecticut in the U.S. Congress in the early years of the United States' existence as a nation, serving as both a Representative and a Senator.

For many years, Hillhouse served not only New Haven but also suburban towns around the city that did not have high schools of their own. Its peak enrollment was nearly 5,000 students, when the school had to conduct double sessions to accommodate the large enrollment.

Statistics

The school includes grades 9 through 12 and enrolls about 979 students.

Sports

Hillhouse became involved in athletic competition as early as 1866, when some boys formed a club to play a sport that is described as having "resembled rugby and soccer." By 1884, students were participating in several sports, including modern football, which had been invented by Walter Camp of New Haven. Team competition in baseball, tennis, ice hockey, indoor polo and yacht racing also had been established around this time. Basketball was introduced around the beginning of the 20th century.

Hillhouse football teams have won 17 state championships, ranking the school third in the state for football championships. The boys’ and girls’ basketball teams have a combined total 32 state championships. 23 for the boys and 9 for the girls. The boys’ and girls’ track teams also have more than 25 state championships between them. The Academics also have won state championships in baseball, swimming, ice hockey and tennis.

In 1999, a grant was provided by the Connecticut Association of Schools to construct a fieldhouse for sports. Construction was finished in 2002, and it was named the New Haven Athletic Center, later to become the Floyd Little Athletic Center in 2011. The 115,000-square-foot (10,700 m2) Athletic Center houses events for basketball, indoor track, and tennis. It has a capacity of 3,500 seats.

Notable alumni

Among the school's notable alumni are:

  • Bob Barthelson, professional baseball pitcher
  • Albie Booth
  • Ernest Borgnine, actor
  • Joseph Payne Brennan, New Haven poet, author, WWII/ETO veteran
  • John C. Daniels, mayor of New Haven
  • Chad Dawson, professional boxer
  • Robert Giaimo, U.S. Congressman
  • Louis Harris, pollster
  • John Huggins, leader in the Black Panthers
  • Levi Jackson, first African-American to play football for Yale University
  • Richard C. Lee, mayor of New Haven
  • Floyd Little
  • Paul McCracken, NBA and Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball player
  • Constance Baker Motley
  • Maurice Podoloff, first president of the National Basketball Association
  • Artie Shaw, jazz clarinetist and big band leader
  • Vincent Scully, architectural historian
  • William Starkweather, artist
  • Dick Tettelbach, former MLB player (New York Yankees, Washington Senators)
  • Terrell Wilks, sprinter and All American at University of Florida
  • References

    Hillhouse High School Wikipedia