This article needs additional citations for verification .(May 2011) |
Bolton High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
72 Brandy Street 06043 United States | |
Coordinates | 41°45′45″N72°25′24″W / 41.762608°N 72.423460°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
CEEB code | 070038 |
Principal | Joseph Maselli |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 260 (2018-19) [1] |
Color(s) | Blue and white |
Athletics | North Central Connecticut Conference |
Mascot | Bulldog |
Website | bhs |
Bolton High School is a public high school located at 72 Brandy Street, Bolton, Connecticut. Bolton participates in the North Central Connecticut Conference (NCCC) for athletics, and competes as a Class "S" school. Bolton High School accepted students from nearby Willington, Connecticut, until that community regionalized in the early 1990s. Academic year 1991-1992 was the last year that Willington students graduated from Bolton High.
Bolton High School was once ranked as the 11th best public high school in Connecticut by comparison of CAPT scores in Reading across the Disciplines and Mathematics.
Bolton High school won the Blue Ribbon award for public schools in 2017.
Bolton High is currently ranked as the 33rd best public high school in Connecticut. [2] In 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2018, and 2019 they were the state Class S champions in Cross Country. [3]
Commencement # | Date | # of Graduates | Commencement Address Speaker | Principal | Superintendent | Board of Education Chairperson |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
55 | 6/10/2021 | 58 | Class speaker Christopher Nemphos | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Andrew Broneill |
54 | 6/15/2020 | 59 | Valedictorian Halle Gavin; Co-Salutatorians Robert Flowers & Matthew Zakowski [4] [5] [6] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Andrew Broneill |
53 | 6/12/2019 | 63 | Class speaker Michael Anthony Barrett [7] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Liz Krueger |
52 | 6/20/2018 | 77 | Class speaker Alexander Harvey [8] [9] [10] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Liz Krueger |
51 | 6/16/2017 | 67 | Class speaker Christina Langton [11] [12] [13] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Liz Krueger |
50 | 6/10/2016 | [14] [15] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Liz Krueger | |
49 | 6/19/2015 | 73 | [16] [17] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Karen Bergin |
48 | 6/19/2014 | 95 | [18] [19] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Karen Bergin |
47 | 6/21/2013 | 82 | [20] [21] | Joseph Maselli | Kristin Heckt | Karen Bergin |
46 | 6/22/2012 | 67 | [22] [23] | Joseph Maselli | Paul K. Smith | Karen Bergin |
45 | 6/23/2011 | 67 | Class speaker Jesse Ruiz [24] | Joseph Maselli | Paul K. Smith | Karen Bergin |
44 | 6/24/2010 | 65 | Class speaker Brandon Lowrey [25] | Karen Adamson | Paul K. Smith | Karen Bergin |
43 | 6/19/2009 | [26] | Paul K. Smith | Mark L. Winzler | Karen Bergin | |
42 | 6/19/2008 | 60 | Class speaker Joelle Pagani [27] | Paul K. Smith | Mark L. Winzler | Karen Bergin |
41 | 6/20/2007 | 78 | Class speaker Samuel Bahre [28] | Paul K. Smith | Mark L. Winzler (Janet M. Tyler, Interim) | Karen Bergin |
40 | 6/22/2006 | 84 | Kathleen Ulm, BHS French Teacher. Retiring [29] | Paul K. Smith | Thomas Cronin | Karen Bergin |
39 | 6/24/2005 | 67 | Linda Maneggia, first-grade teacher at Bolton Center School and recent Wall of Fame nominee [30] | Paul K. Smith | Joseph V. Erardi | Karen Bergin |
38 | 6/??/2004 | Paul K. Smith | Joseph V. Erardi | Karen Bergin | ||
37 | 6/20/2003 | 65 | [31] | Paul K. Smith | Joseph V. Erardi | Karen Bergin |
36 | 6/21/2002 | 53 | Anthony Falcetta, Social Studies teacher, BHS. Retiring after 38 years [32] | Paul K. Smith | Joseph V. Erardi | Karen Bergin |
35 | 6/22/2001 | 50 | Mary Maneggia Grande, Physical Education Coordinator, Manchester Public Schools. BHS Class of 1981 [33] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
34 | 6/16/2000 | 65 | Adam Teller, BHS Class of 1980 [34] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
33 | 6/18/1999 | 52 | Jim Kowalyshyn, Manager of Worldwide Wines, Cheshire. BHS Class of 1979 [35] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
32 | 6/19/1998 | 56 | Jeffrey Winkler, BHS Class of 1978 [36] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
31 | 6/20/1997 | 46 | Robert Peterson, Administrative Director for Laboratory and Radiology Services, Windham Community Memorial Hospital. BHS Class of 1977 [37] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
30 | 6/21/1996 | 44 | Peter H. Ryba, Head of Computer Security & Computer Network Administrator, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory. BHS Class of 1976 [38] | Joseph V. Fleming | Mark Cohan | James H. Marshall |
29 | 6/16/1995 | 56 | Robin Murdock-Meggers, J.D.; Marte, Keith, Falkenstein, Sullivan, Meggers & Paul, Attorneys at Law. BHS Class of 1975 [39] [40] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
28 | 6/17/1994 | 45 | Chris Rohrs, Vice President and General Manager, WFSB-TV Channel 3, Hartford [41] [42] [43] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
27 | 6/18/1993 | 46 | Tom McCarthy, Announcer for Radio station KOMO, Seattle [44] [45] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
26 | 6/19/1992 | 54 | Faith Middleton, Host of Connecticut Public Radio's "Open Air New England" [46] [47] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
25 | 6/21/1991 | 79 | Tom Callinan, singer/songwriter [48] [49] [50] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
24 | 6/15/1990 | 71 | Beasley Reece, Sports Anchor, WVIT Channel 30 [51] [52] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
23 | 6/16/1989 | 70 | Hilton Kaderli, Weather Forecaster, WFSB-Channel 3, Hartford [53] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
22 | 6/17/1988 | 87 | James M. Makuch, Accountant [54] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
21 | 6/18/1987 | 68 | Valedictorian Peggy Klekotka [55] [56] [57] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
20 | 6/17/1986 | 69 | Gerry Brooks, News Anchor, WFSB-Channel 3, Hartford [58] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
19 | 6/20/1985 | 70 | Ellsworth Grant, former Vice President, Allen Manufacturing Co; former Mayor of West Hartford [59] | Joseph V. Fleming | Richard E. Packman | James H. Marshall |
18 | 6/20/1984 | 45 | Joan Hopper, Humanities Coordinator [60] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | James H. Marshall |
17 | 6/15/1983 | 47 | Anthony Falcetta, Social studies teacher, Bolton High School [61] [62] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
16 | 6/16/1982 | 57 | Gordie Howe, NHL Hockey player, former Whalers & Colleen Howe [63] [64] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
15 | 6/16/1981 | 57 | Paul Q. Beeching, associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Central Connecticut State College [65] [66] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
14 | 6/17/1980 | 64 | Ann Butler, host of WFSB-Channel 3’s PM Magazine [67] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
13 | 6/12/1979 | 43 | Joseph Haloburdo, Chairman of the Bolton Board of Education [68] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
12 | 6/27/1978 | 59 | John Senteio, former Principal, Bolton Elementary School [69] [70] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Joseph Haloburdo |
11 | 6/22/1977 | 64 | Henry Parker, State Treasurer, Connecticut [71] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | Robert Thornton |
10 | 6/18/1976 | 73 | Dr. Janos Decsy, Ph.D, associate professor, history department, Greater Hartford Community College [72] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | William Vogel |
9 | 6/24/1975 | 83 | Dr. Thomas P. O'Connor, assistant superintendent and director personnel in the Newton, Mass, public school system [73] [74] | Joseph V. Fleming | Raymond A. Allen | William Vogel |
8 | 6/21/1974 | 53 | Dr. Charles F. Stroebel III, Director of the Gengras Laboratories, psychophysiology, the Institute of Living in Hartford [75] [76] | Norman T Shaw | Raymond A. Allen | Andrew Maneggia |
7 | 6/15/1973 | 72 | Col. John E. Richters Jr, Jukido black belt holder, life insurance salesman and author [77] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | Andrew Maneggia |
6 | 6/19/1972 | 55 | Dr. John E. Rogers, Lecturer, African-American culture and history [78] [79] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | Andrew Maneggia |
5 | 6/16/1971 | 73 | Rev. Douglas Theuner, former vicar of St. George’s; rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Willimantic [80] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | William J. Grunske |
4 | 6/16/1970 | 56 | Dr. Frederick W. Lowe Jr., president of Manchester Community College [81] [82] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | William J. Grunske |
3 | 6/20/1969 | 66 | John W. Vlandis, Director of Admissions, University of Connecticut [83] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | Harold Smith |
2 | 6/18/1968 | 64 | Capt. Richard B. Laning, USN (Ret.); Assistant Chief Scientist at United Aircraft Corp. [84] | Norman T Shaw | Joseph Castagna | Harold Smith |
1 | 6/21/1967 | 58 | Dr. Robert B. Norris, Dean of Continuing Education, University of Connecticut [85] [86] [87] [88] [89] | Ralph Conlon (Acting) | Ralph Conlon (Acting) | Walter Waddell |
Hartford is the capital city of the U.S. state of Connecticut. It was the seat of Hartford County until Connecticut disbanded county government in 1960. It is the largest city in the Capitol Planning Region, and core city of the Greater Hartford metropolitan area. Census estimates since the 2010 United States census have indicated that Hartford is the fourth-largest city in Connecticut with a 2020 population of 121,054, behind the coastal cities of Bridgeport, New Haven, and Stamford.
Manchester is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States. The town is part of the Capitol Planning Region. As of the 2020 census, the town had a total population of 59,713. The urban center of the town is the Manchester census-designated place, with a population of 36,379 at the 2020 census. The town is named after Manchester, in England.
Bolton is a small suburban town in the Capitol Planning Region, Connecticut, United States. The population was 4,858 as of the 2020 census. Bolton was incorporated in October 1720 and is governed by town meeting, with a first selectman and board of selectman as well as other boards serving specific functions. Bolton was named after a town of the same name in England, also located near Manchester.
The Hartford Courant is the largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Connecticut, and is considered to be the oldest continuously published newspaper in the United States. A morning newspaper serving most of the state north of New Haven and east of Waterbury, its headquarters on Broad Street in Hartford, Connecticut is a short walk from the state capitol. It reports regional news with a chain of bureaus in smaller cities and a series of local editions. It also operates CTNow, a free local weekly newspaper and website.
WTIC-TV is a television station in Hartford, Connecticut, United States, serving the Hartford–New Haven market as an affiliate of the Fox network. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Waterbury-licensed CW affiliate WCCT-TV. Both stations share studios on Broad Street in downtown Hartford, while WTIC-TV's transmitter is located on Rattlesnake Mountain in Farmington.
East Catholic High School is a private, college preparatory high school located in Manchester, Connecticut, United States, under the auspices of the Archdiocese of Hartford. The parochial school was founded in 1961 and is inspired by the charism of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. East Catholic is the only school in the Archdiocese of Hartford that has had the continued presence of its founding order throughout its history.
Bridgeport station is a shared Amtrak, Metro-North Railroad, and CTrail train station along the Northeast Corridor serving Bridgeport, Connecticut and nearby towns. On Metro-North, the station is the transfer point between the Waterbury Branch and the main New Haven Line. Amtrak's inter-city Northeast Regional and Vermonter service also stop at the station, as do some CTrail Shore Line East trains. In addition the transfer point for Greater Bridgeport Transit Authority buses, the departure point for the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry across Long Island Sound to Port Jefferson, New York, and both the Total Mortgage Arena and the Hartford Healthcare Amphitheater are located adjacent to the station.
Woodstock Academy (WA), founded in 1801, is a high school located in Woodstock, Connecticut, United States. The Academy, which describes itself as an independent school, serves residents from the Connecticut towns of Brooklyn, Canterbury, Eastford, Pomfret, Union, and Woodstock. The respective towns' taxpayers pay student tuition through municipal taxes, and therefore state agencies and the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) categorize Woodstock as a public school. The school also accepts tuition-paying students from surrounding towns and states as day students, and students from around the country and the world as residential students.
The Connecticut Open is the Connecticut state open golf tournament, open to both amateur and professional golfers. It is organized by the Connecticut State Golf Association. It has been played annually since 1931 at a variety of courses around the state. It was considered a PGA Tour event in the 1930s.
Albert Levitt was an American judge, law professor, Unitarian minister, attorney and government official. He unsuccessfully ran many times for public office in Connecticut, California and New Hampshire, generally receiving only a small percentage of the vote. While a judge of the District Court of the Virgin Islands in 1935, he ordered that women there must be allowed to register and vote.
Enrico Fermi High School (defunct) was a high school located in Enfield, Connecticut, and closed when it consolidated with Enfield High School in 2016.
The 1993 Connecticut Huskies football team represented the University of Connecticut in the 1993 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Huskies were led by eleventh year head coach Tom Jackson, and completed the season with a record of 6–5.
The 2018 Connecticut gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2018, to elect the next governor and lieutenant governor of Connecticut, concurrently with the election of Connecticut's Class I U.S. Senate seat, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states, elections to the United States House of Representatives, and various state and local elections. This race's Democratic margin of victory was the closest to the national average of 3.1 points.
The 1930 New Hampshire Wildcats football team was an American football team that represented the University of New Hampshire as a member of the New England Conference during the 1930 college football season. In its 15th season under head coach William "Butch" Cowell, the team compiled a 5–2–1 record, and outscored their opponents, 160–54. The team played its home games in Durham, New Hampshire, at Memorial Field.
The first confirmed case of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. state of Connecticut was confirmed on March 8, although there had previously been multiple people suspected of having COVID-19, all of which eventually tested negative. As of January 19, 2022, there were 599,028 confirmed cases, 68,202 suspected cases, and 9,683 COVID-associated deaths in the state.
This is a list of George Floyd protests in Connecticut, United States.
Robert M. Ward was an American politician who served in the Connecticut House of Representatives from 1984 to 2007, and as the minority leader from 1995 to 2007, as a member of the Republican Party. He was the longest-serving caucus leader in the state legislature in Connecticut's history.
Addo E. Bonetti was an American politician and Marine who served in the Connecticut House of Representatives from the 175th and 65th districts from 1967 to 1979, as a member of the Democratic Party. Prior to his political career he had served in the United States Marine Corps during World War II.