Smoky Mountain High School

Last updated
Smoky Mountain High School
SMHS Today.jpg
Smoky Mountain High School from NC 107
Location
Smoky Mountain High School
100 Smoky Mountain Drive

28779

United States
Coordinates 35°21′13″N83°11′59″W / 35.35361°N 83.19972°W / 35.35361; -83.19972
Information
School type Public secondary school
Motto"Locally grown, globally prepared"
Established1988(36 years ago) (1988)
School district Jackson County Public Schools
CEEB code 343904
PrincipalEvelyn Graning
Faculty54.16 (FTE) [1]
Enrollment899 (2022–23) [1]
Student to teacher ratio16.60 [1]
Campus typeRural
Color(s)Blue and silver
  
MascotMustangs
Website www.jcpsnc.org/smh

Smoky Mountain High School is a public high school located in Sylva, North Carolina. The school formed as a result of the consolidation of the former Sylva-Webster High School and Cullowhee High School in 1988 at the Sylva-Webster campus, which dates to 1960.

Contents

Smoky Mountain High School is a part of the Jackson County School System. It is the only 912 high school in the county. The other schools with grades 9-2 are Blue Ridge School, a K12th grade school, in Cashiers, North Carolina and Jackson County Early College, with grades 913 on the Southwestern Community College Campus.

Buildings on the SMHS campus

Former Sylva-Webster High School, now Smoky Mountain, when it was brand new in 1960 SMHS 1960.jpg
Former Sylva-Webster High School, now Smoky Mountain, when it was brand new in 1960

The buildings have different uses. A Building contains the cafeteria, commons, lobby, library, front office, guidance rooms, and many classrooms, as well as the former auditorium, now used as a chorus room. B Building houses many classrooms and the art room. The Gym/Band Building houses locker rooms as well as a gymnasium, band room, and storage/mechanical areas. It formerly housed the boiler for the school, the chimney for which still stands, although chimney swifts have taken up residence in it. C Building has the new science wing completed in 2006, as well as many classrooms. D and E Buildings house vocational shops.

The buildings have gone through many renovations since three of them opened as Sylva-Webster High School in 1960, the A Building (1960) had the lobby, cafeteria, and front office completely redone in 2004, with many smaller additions dating to before that time; B Building (1960) is now attached to C Building (1989) through an addition constructed in 2006 with a ramp to join the two buildings on the slightly hillside campus. D Building (1978), originally on its own with a long covered walkway connecting it to the original A and B buildings, now sits between C Building and E Building, constructed in 2004. The Gym/Band Room Building (1960) had a new, larger band room built onto it in the 1970s and in 2004, the large, tall gym windows were replaced with brick and smaller windows.

They built an auditorium and new gym in 2013. It also closed during the 20192020 coronavirus pandemic at the order of Governor Roy Cooper, but was re-opened in August 2020 to commence the start of the 20202021 school year. As of September 2021, the school is listed as the #1 school in the state in COVID-19 safety protocols [2] [3]

Accreditation

The school is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction.

School history

The old Sylva High School, built in 1924 and demolished in 1990 Sylva Central Township High School.jpg
The old Sylva High School, built in 1924 and demolished in 1990

Smoky Mountain High School opened in 1988 at the old Sylva-Webster campus, and consolidated the smaller Cullowhee High School with the larger Sylva-Webster High School. At first the school was overcrowded because of the number of students, but that was shortly thereafter fixed by the addition of C Building, a two-story wing on the back of the high school. In 20042006, the high school added a new cafeteria, lobby, science building, vocational building, front office, and greenhouse, which resolved the problems associated with the growth of the student body since 1960.

Smoky Mountain High School achieved the Guinness World Record for "Most people hugging soft toys simultaneously," with 835 people simultaneously hugging stuffed animals. [4]

Webster Rock School, built by the WPA in 1936 Webster School 1936.jpg
Webster Rock School, built by the WPA in 1936

Sylva-Webster High School

Sylva-Webster High School was built in 1959, opened in 1960, and was formed from the consolidation of two smaller high schools. The larger one, Sylva High School, opened in 1915 in a two-story frame building and moved to a larger, 8th11th Grade Building in 1924 at the present location of Mark Watson Park, which was formerly a fairground. The building was known as the "Old Sylva School" when it closed and became part of nearby Sylva Elementary in 1960. Sylva Elementary had opened in 1929 and is one of the predecessors to Fairview School. Sylva Elementary School was demolished in 1974 and Sylva High School was demolished in 1990. All that remains is the old vocational shop building, which once served as the Jackson County Recreation Department, but is now condemned.[ citation needed ]

In 1979, Sylva-Webster High School marching band was the Grand Champion at the Bands of America National Championship. [5]

The smaller school, Webster High School, opened in 1910 when Webster was still the county seat, in a newly built two story frame building. This building lasted until 1936, when the old Rock Webster School opened next door, and it was demolished in 1937. The new school housed all of Webster's schoolchildren and also the high school students from Savannah Township until 1960, after which it became an elementary school; it closed in 1974 when Fairview School opened. It still stands but the original windows and doors were removed and smaller ones took their places, and the old, tall ceilings are hidden under a drop in ceiling. It serves Southwestern Child Development Center, which is a free preschool, and the Jackson County Family Resources Center. Its gymnasium serves as a kind of community center.[ citation needed ]

Cullowhee High School

The 1923 Cullowhee School Cullowhee School 1923.jpg
The 1923 Cullowhee School
Camp Building, Western Carolina University (ex-Cordelia Camp Laboratory School) Cordelia Camp Laboratory School, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC (31699127007).jpg
Camp Building, Western Carolina University (ex-Cordelia Camp Laboratory School)

Cullowhee High School was the first name of Western Carolina University, in nearby Cullowhee, but the high school separated from the university when an existing public school, dating to 1923 as Cullowhee School, had high school classrooms added in 1925. The building stood where Brown Cafeteria now stands, and was purchased in 1927 by the university, at which time it became Cullowhee Training School. The public school moved to the Gertrude McKee Training School in 1939, and then to the Cordelia Camp Laboratory School in 1964, where the high school program remained until 1988. Cordelia Camp Laboratory School closed in 1994 when the new K8 Cullowhee Valley School opened. The building is now known as The Cordelia Camp Outreach Center, Camp Lab, or the Camp Building. By the time the high school closed, Camp Laboratory Elementary School was the only K8 School left in the district. Cullowhee High School once had several multiple classroom elementary schools that fed into it, but the last one, Canada, which had opened in 1952, closed in 1982. The other major elementary schools were Johns Creek (Caney Fork Community, 1925–1965), East LaPorte (East LaPorte, 1925–1947), Tuckaseigee (Tuckasegee, 1948–1958), and Cowarts (1928–1951). [6]

See also

Jackson County Early College

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "Smoky Mountain High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved April 21, 2024.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-04-05. Retrieved 2011-12-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. http://www.thesylvaherald.com/html/officials_ok_design_phase_for_.html%5B%5D
  4. "Most people hugging soft toys simultaneously". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  5. "BOA History 2.0 Continued - RESULTS". hornrank.proboards.com. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  6. The History of Jackson County Sesquicentennial Edition