Nashville High School | |
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Address | |
1301 Mt Pleasant Drive , Arkansas 71852 United States | |
Coordinates | 33°59′31″N93°51′45″W / 33.99194°N 93.86250°W |
Information | |
School type | Public comprehensive |
Founded | 1907 |
Status | Open |
School district | Nashville School District |
CEEB code | 041810 |
NCES School ID | 051038000757 [1] |
Principal | Tate Gordon |
Teaching staff | 39.44 (on FTE basis) [1] |
Grades | 10–12 |
Enrollment | 465 (2022-2023) [2] |
Student to teacher ratio | 11.79 [1] |
Education system | ADE Smart Core |
Classes offered | Regular (Core), Career Focus, Advanced Placement (AP) |
Color(s) | Orange and black |
Athletics conference | 4A Region 7 [3] |
Mascot | The Scrapper [3] |
Team name | Nashville Scrappers |
Accreditation | ADE |
Newspaper | Scrapper Star |
Yearbook | The Scrapper |
Communities served | Nashville |
Website | nhs |
Nashville High School is a comprehensive public high school located in Nashville, Arkansas, United States. The school provides secondary education in grades 10 through 12 for students in the Nashville and the surrounding unincorporated communities of Howard County, Arkansas. It is one of three public high schools in Howard County and the only senior high school administered by the Nashville School District. Nashville Junior High School is its main feeder school.
Nashville High School is a Title I school that is accredited by the ADE and has been accredited by AdvancED since 1961. The school has a partnership with UA Cossatot that offers training in various vocational, technical, and technology-based courses. [4] [5]
The assumed course of study follows the Smart Core curriculum developed by the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE), which requires students complete at least 22 units prior to graduation. Students may take Advanced Placement (AP) courses and exam with the opportunity to receive college credit.
The Nashville High School mascot is the Scrapper with orange and black serving as the school colors.
The Nashville Scrappers compete in interscholastic activities within Class 4A administered by the Arkansas Activities Association. The Scrappers play within the 4A-7 Conference. Nashville fields varsity teams in football, basketball (boys/girls), cheer, cross country (boys/girls), baseball, fastpitch softball, track and field (boys/girls), tennis (boys/girls), golf (boys/girls), and soccer (boys/girls). Nashville's athletic program is one of the most successful in Arkansas, having won 42 state championships. [3]
In 2015, first-year head coach Mike Volarvich led the Scrappers to another state title, equaling the 1996 team by amassing a perfect 15-0 record, and breaking numerous school records. [6]
In 1883, Nashville became a town and continued to grow due to the Nashville expansion of a branch of the A & L Railroad in 1884. With such growth, the first public school system in Nashville was formed in the 1880s and a frame schoolhouse was built. The original schoolhouse remained in use until a fire destroyed the structure in 1931. A new school building was constructed in 1932. [7] By the 1940s, Nashville High School needed a gymnasium to hold local sporting and entertainment events.
Garrett Whiteside Hall | |
Location in Arkansas | |
Location | junction of North Third Ave., and Lockesburg St., SW corner, Nashville, Arkansas |
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Coordinates | 33°57′1″N93°50′59″W / 33.95028°N 93.84972°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1940 |
Architectural style | 20th-Century Plain |
NRHP reference No. | 94001340 [8] |
Added to NRHP | November 21, 1994 |
In 1940, the Garrett Whiteside Hall gymnasium was built by the National Youth Administration (NYA) and remains as the last school building of this period to survive in Nashville. The gymnasium is a representative example of the restrained, functional architectural style preferred by public works agencies during the Great Depression. Constructed using locally-available building material and exhibiting symmetrical massing and composition, the inclusion of a unique rounded roof makes the structure distinctive. The structure is so named for Nashville-native Garrett Whiteside, who served as secretary for multiple congressman and senators from Arkansas.
When completed in the fall for the 1940–41 school year, the Garrett Whiteside Hall gymnasium had a seating capacity of 800 for basketball games and over 2,000 people could attend school plays and graduations using floor seating. Since the construction of the new high school and gymnasium, Garrett Whiteside Hall continues to serve as a practice gym for the school district.
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