Neha Patil (Editor)

Vestavia Hills High School

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Type
  
Public

Faculty
  
165

Enrollment
  
1902

Phone
  
+1 205-402-5250

Number of students
  
1,902

Established
  
1970 (1970)

Grades
  
9–12

Color(s)
  
Red & Blue

Principal
  
Tyler Burgess

Vestavia Hills High School

Address
  
2235 Lime Rock Rd, Vestavia Hills, AL 35216, USA

District
  
Vestavia Hills City School District

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Vestavia Hills High School (VHHS), founded in 1970, is a public high school in Vestavia Hills, Alabama, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, USA. It is part of the Vestavia Hills City Schools.

Contents

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History

The land was acquired by Louis Pizitz, a Polish immigrant who settled in Birmingham in 1889. Pizitz lived here with his wife, Minnie and their son, Hortense. After their death, their son Hortense sold the land to the City of Vestavia Hills in the 1960s.

The school was built in the 1970s, in the context of the establishment of segregation academies in the 1970s, which enabled white American children to segregate themselves from black children, who remained in public schools. Until 2016 the school mascot, known as Rebel Man, was a plantation owner. The school "picked a Confederate Flag-waving Civil War Rebel because it saw itself as rebellious."

Academics

Vestavia has 150 courses available on yearly basis. Vestavia offers a number of AP courses (World History, U.S. History, European History, Human Geography, English Language & Lit., Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Computer Science Principles, Psychology, Physics 1, Statistics, Biology, Chemistry, French, Latin, Spanish, German, Government, Economics, Studio Art, Environmental Science, and Comparative Government). Vestavia also offers Honors courses for all core subjects to all grades. Dual Enrollment classes are available for both English and Math.

The school has a music department. It publishes a newspaper, The Vedette, and a literary and visual arts magazine, The Muse.

Achievements

The school is a two-time recipient of the national Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the United States Department of Education for 1990-91 and 2009.

The debate team, winners of seven national championships, has the distinction of being the first team in history to win both the Lincoln-Douglas Debate and the Policy Debate in the National Forensic League's National Speech and Debate Tournament. The school is also one of two to have won two national championships in Lincoln-Douglas debate at the Tournament of Champions national high school debate tournament.

In 2008, the school won the "Adam Smith Division" in the Council for Economic Education's National Economics Challenge, and its students finished runner up in the national finals of the 22nd annual We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution competition in 2009.

Athletics

Vestavia Hills High School fields varsity teams in football, cheerleading, basketball, baseball, soccer, wrestling, golf, tennis, softball, swimming, volleyball, cross country, and indoor and outdoor track and field.

VHHS has won AHSAA state championships in the following sports:

  • Baseball (1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000)
  • Boys' Basketball (1992, 2009)
  • Girls' Basketball (1987)
  • Boys' Cross Country (1987, 2013)
  • Girls' Cross Country (1981)
  • Football (1980, 1998)
  • Boys' Golf (1991, 1994)
  • Girls' Golf (1973, 1974)
  • Girls' Indoor Track (2005)
  • Boys' Soccer (1991, 1995, 2013, 2014)
  • Girls' Soccer (2001, 2005, 2007)
  • Boys' Tennis (1995, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014)
  • Girls' Tennis (1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010)
  • Boys' Outdoor Track & Field (2008)
  • Wrestling (1976, 1985, 1986, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2016, 2017)
  • Buddy Anderson Field (at Thompson Reynolds Stadium) is home of the Vestavia Hills Rebels football team. The field is named after current head coach Buddy Anderson. Anderson has been coaching at Vestavia since 1972, and has remained the head coach since 1978.

    Notable alumni

  • Colter Bean (1995), Major League Baseball pitcher (New York Yankees).
  • Steven Black, professional football player.
  • Chris Hammond (1984), Major League Baseball pitcher.
  • Josh Hancock (1996), former Major League Baseball pitcher (St. Louis Cardinals).
  • Trey Hardee (2002), 2012 Olympic Decathlon silver medalist, 2009&2011 IAAF World Championships Decathlon winner, 2008 Beijing Olympian, 2006 NCAA Records (decathlon, heptathlon), 2005 NCAA Champion.
  • Smylie Kaufman (2010), professional golfer and winner on PGA Tour.
  • Jo Kittinger (1974), children's book author.
  • Rebecca Moore, Miss Alabama USA 2006.
  • Michael Papajohn (1983), actor, film producer and stunt performer.
  • Vann Stuedeman, head coach of the Mississippi State Lady Bulldogs softball team.
  • Jordan Swing, professional basketball player.
  • 2015 mascot controversy

    In the wake of the Charleston church shooting in June 2015, The Birmingham News highlighted this history and called for a removal of the mascot. Meanwhile, the school superintendent called it 'a "point of contention for some members" of the community'. By early July 2015, some Vestavia Hills residents wrote an op ed in The Birminghan News calling on the school board to change its name. By the middle of July 2015, comedian John Oliver made fun of the claim that it was "heritage, not hate" on national television. He argued, "Your logo is a plantation owner. [...] And saying that the image of a plantation owner is not used in a racist way is a bit like arguing the Hitachi magic wand is only used as a back massager."

    The Vestavia Hills City Schools System decided to keep the Rebels name but initiate a "rebranding" process. The new branding, developed by Knight Eady, a local sports marketing and event operations group, was approved by the school board on May 18, 2016. The new branding replaced the objectionable mascot and instituted the new slogan "You play one Rebel you play us all."

    References

    Vestavia Hills High School Wikipedia