Fairmont Senior High School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fairmont Senior High School
FSHS seal.jpg
Address
1 Loop Park Drive

,
26554

United States
Coordinates39°28′42″N 80°9′27″W / 39.47833°N 80.15750°W / 39.47833; -80.15750Coordinates: 39°28′42″N 80°9′27″W / 39.47833°N 80.15750°W / 39.47833; -80.15750
Information
School typePublic secondary
Established1876
School boardMarion County
SuperintendentRandall Farley[1]
PrincipalKaren Finamore
Teaching staff45.00 (FTE)[2]
Grades9–12
Enrollment819 (2018–19)[2]
Student to teacher ratio18:20[2]
Campus size15.0 acres (61,000 m2)[3]
Color(s)Royal blue, white & red (secondary)    
Athletics conferenceBig Ten
NicknamePolar bears
RivalEast Fairmont High School
NewspaperHi Life
YearbookMaple Leaves
Websitewww.marionboe.com/fairmontsenior.html
FSHS spring.jpg
Fairmont Senior High School
FSHS winter.jpg
Main Building
Fairmont Senior High School is located in West Virginia
Fairmont Senior High School
Coordinates39°28′42″N 80°9′27″W / 39.47833°N 80.15750°W / 39.47833; -80.15750
BuiltApril 1, 1929
ArchitectWilliam B. Ittner
Architectural styleColonial Revival
NRHP reference No.02000254[4]
Added to NRHPMarch 22, 2002

Fairmont Senior High School, is a public high school in Fairmont, West Virginia. The current school building, opened in 1928, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Serving grades nine through twelve, it is one of three high schools in Marion County, along with East Fairmont High School and North Marion High School.[5]

The school was established in 1876 as Fairmont High School. A growing student population led to the school being relocated in 1905 and then to its current campus in 1928. The school offers a number of different extracurricular activities, such as marching band, a choir program, a theatre program, and a wide range of athletic opportunities. Notable alumni include Olympic gold medalist Mary Lou Retton, U.S. Air Force officer Frank Kendall Everest Jr., entrepreneur Jim Delligatti, business executive Heather Bresch, and several others.

History[]

Second Ward Building: the original building to house Fairmont Senior, which was built in 1872 and began to house Fairmont Senior in 1876.

The first building to house the high school was the Second Ward Building on the corner of Adams and Quincy. The building opened in 1872 and jointly held the Fairmont public school and the Fairmont State Normal School until 1892. This is despite the public school and normal school's separation in 1875.[citation needed]

Fairmont High School was founded in the Second Ward Building in 1876, and the first graduating class consisted of four students in 1877. Increased enrollment and the need for additional facilities eventually led to the construction of a new school.[citation needed]

5th Street building[]

"The Point" building: the second building to house Fairmont Senior, which was built in 1905.

In 1905, a new building was constructed near the corner of 5th Street and Benoni Avenue, in an area known as "The Point". The building consisted of 12 classrooms, labs, offices and a library with the top floor used as a gymnasium. The first class attended the new Fairmont High School in 1906. A gymnasium was constructed at the rear of the building in 1922, and although the high school no longer stands, the Fifth Street Gym is still in operation for interscholastic purposes. The old building remained in operation as Fairmont Junior High School until 1963 when the foundation of the building slipped, forcing its closure.[citation needed]

Loop Park building[]

Loop Park building: the current building to house Fairmont Senior, which was built in 1928.

In 1927, the school system decided to adopt a 6–3–3 organization for schools in the area. This meant that grades 7–9 would make up a junior high school, while grades 10–12 would create a senior high school.[citation needed]

A new senior high school was built at Loop Park in 1928, which is where Fairmont Senior High School currently resides. The seventh and eighth grades were relocated to Dunbar School on High Street. Much of the new building was constructed of concrete, which helped to mitigate the destruction caused by a fire that damaged a large section of the school's roof on February 16, 1979. The foundation of the building was preserved.[citation needed]

Architect William B. Ittner designed the Loop Park building;[6] he has designed several notable public school buildings[7] and other buildings, such as the Missouri Athletic Club building[8] and the Continental Life Building.[9] On March 22, 2002, Fairmont Senior was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[4][10]

Campus[]

The campus currently consists of several different components, such as a main building, the Freshman Building, physical education facilities, and inscriptions. The campus is surrounded by different types of trees, such as dogwoods, maples, and oaks.[citation needed] The Loop Park building's architectural classification is Colonial Revival, with a stone foundation, brick walls, and asphalt shingle roofing.

Senior Court[]

A statue of Abraham Lincoln in front of the now-defunct Senior Court in around 2008. The Senior Court was later replaced by a media center.

Senior Court was a feature of the Loop Park building for years. This light court was bound on all sides by interior walls of the school, but it did not have a ceiling. The opening provided sunlight to the surrounding halls and classrooms, as well as the small glass greenhouse located just inside the court.[citation needed]

In 1929, the first class to graduate from the building presented the school with a statue of Abraham Lincoln that still stands at the school's entrance.[citation needed]

Media center replacement[]

In 2010, a school bond was passed by the Marion County Board of Education to renovate Fairmont Senior's campus.[11] This $4.2 million project included replacing the Senior Court with a school media center.[12] The project took a few years to complete.[11] Unlike the Senior Court, the media center has a ceiling and is a two-story room with a balcony.[13]

Auditorium[]

Fairmont Senior's auditorium in 2019.

Fairmont Senior's Lop auditorium originally housed 1107 opera style chairs and a 16 by 50-foot (15 m) wooden stage. Later, when the stage was expanded, the first four rows of seating were removed leaving 976 seats. By the start of the 20th century, many of the seats were in poor condition and needed to be replaced. The 1000 Voices fund was established to restore the auditorium to its original state. In 2001, the seats were dismantled and sent away to be completely refurbished and reinstalled into the auditorium. Intricate details such as the gold leaf ribbons on the house lighting globes was also preserved, as well as detailed paintings on the proscenium arch.[citation needed]

Freshman Building[]

Fairmont Senior has a one-story building located at the east end of its campus, which is known as the Freshman Building.[6] In the early 1990s, a chemistry lab was built adjacent to the Freshman Building.[14]

Physical education facilities[]

Originally, Fairmont Senior only had one gymnasium, which was located on the second floor of the main building. In November 1989, a proposal was made for a new physical education facility beside Fairmont Senior's Freshman Building. Work for the facility began in 1992. Despite objections and a lawsuit from area residents, the facility was completed a few years later.[15]

Inscriptions[]

Fairmont Senior's building has several inscriptions that can be found etched into the stone at various locations on the exterior of the main building.

Main entrance Auditorium wing Gymnasium wing
FAIRMONT
HIGH SCHOOL
KNOWLEDGE IS THE GREAT SUN IN
THE FIRMAMENT – LIFE AND POWER ARE
SCATTERED WITH ALL ITS BEAMS
AND GOD SAID LET THERE BE LIGHT
AND THERE WAS LIGHT
LET THE PEOPLE KNOW THE TRUTH
AND THE WORLD WILL BE SAFE
First rear entrance Second rear entrance
ACHIEVEMENT
LIVE IN DEEDS - NOT WORDS
OPPORTUNITY
ACT IN THE LIVING PRESENT

Inscription's origins

Academics[]

Fairmont Senior High School offers different academic opportunities for its students. The schools offers math, English, science, social studies, foreign language, special education, and elective classes.[18]

Advanced Placement classes[]

The school offers a number of different Advanced Placement classes. The AP classes offered in Fairmont Senior's 2020-21 school year include AP Art History, AP Calculus AB, AP Chemistry, AP Comparative Government and Politics, AP English Language and Composition, AP English Literature and Composition, AP European History, AP Music Theory, AP Psychology, AP Statistics, AP U.S. Government and Politics, and AP United States History.[19]

Fine arts[]

Fairmont Senior High School offers different fine arts programs for its students.

Marching band[]

Fairmont Senior's marching band plays at East-West Stadium for the 52nd annual FSHS Band Spectacular in 2017.

Fairmont Senior has a marching band, which is known as the Fairmont Senior High School Polar Bear Band.[20] The school's marching band was first directed full time by Earl McConnell Sr.[21] The marching band has performed in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City,[22] Walt Disney World, and Universal Studios.[23] The school holds a Band Spectacular annually at East-West Stadium where college and high school bands play their respective field shows.[24][25]

Other than the school's marching band, the school's instrumental music curriculum has previously included symphonic band, concert band, jazz ensemble, and steel band.[26]

Choir program[]

Fairmont Senior's choir performs in a concert at the school's auditorium in 2018.

Fairmont Senior has three choral groups: the Madrigals, women's ensemble, and men's ensemble.[27] The full name of the school's Madrigals group is the Fairmont Senior Madrigal Chamber Choir, which is considered to be a renaissance style a cappella choir.[28] The group was started by Doug Bunner in 1985;[29] he taught at the school until his retirement in 2006.[30] The group hosts an annual elimination dinner at the Fairmont Knights of Columbus,[31] and the school presents the Madrigals's Yuletide Feast biennially (a tradition that started in 1985).[32] The group has performed at other places, such as the current Fairmont Senior building,[33] Meadowbrook Mall,[34] West Virginia University Mountainlair,[35] and the WorldStrides OnStage competition in Orlando, Florida.[36]

Thespian program[]

Fairmont Senior offers a thespian program. Fairmont Senior's thespians group is known as the Fairmont Senior High School Thespians Troupe.[37] Fairmont Senior's group has performed in different events, such as the West Virginia State Thesbian Festival.[38]

Athletics[]

Fairmont Senior offers a number athletic opportunities to its students, such as baseball, softball, basketball, cross country, golf, cheer, football, volleyball, soccer, swimming, tennis, track, and wrestling. Fairmont Senior also offers lacrosse, but, as of December 2020, it is not a sport of the West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission (the main governing head of West Virginia high school band, cheer, and sports).[39]

State championship history[]

Boys' sports State titles Girls' sports State titles
Baseball[40][41] Softball[42][43]
Boys basketball[44][45] 1927, 1939, 1942, 1949, 1996, 2016, 2017 Girls basketball[46][47] 1997, 2017
Cross country[48][49][50][51] 1977, 1988, 1997, 1999, 2012, 2018, 2019 Cross country[48][49][51] 1989, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2019
Golf[50][52][53] 2019 Cheer[54][55][56] 1991, 1992, 1999, 2021
Football[57][58][59] 1903,[citation needed] 1907,[citation needed] 1924,[citation needed] 1929,[citation needed] 1946, 2018, 2020 Volleyball[60][61]
Soccer[62][63] 2015, 2019, 2020 Soccer[62]
Swimming[64][65] 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Swimming[64][65] 2006
Boys tennis[66][67] Girls tennis[68][69]
Boys track[70][71] Girls track[72][73] 1999
Lacrosse[citation needed] 2009 Lacrosse[citation needed] 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2016
Wrestling[74][75] 1960

Mascot[]

The mascot of Fairmont Senior High School is the Polar Bear. Originally, Fairmont Senior's athletic teams were known as "Ice's Men", which was in reference to Coach Frank Ice who coached the school's athletic teams from 1914 to 1920. In 1926, the Polar Bear mascot was officially established in honor of Ice. West Fairmont Middle School's, a Fairmont Senior feeder school, mascot is the Polar Cubs[76] or Polar Bears Cubs[77] (a reference to Fairmont's Senior's mascot).

Two polar bear statues stand at the entrance of Fairmont Senior in 2017, a donation by Fairmont Senior's class of 1972.

Rivalry[]

Fairmont Senior is one of three AA high schools in Marion County, along with East Fairmont High School and North Marion High School.[78] East Fairmont High School and Fairmont Senior's football teams have met annually beginning on October 25, 1921,[79] making the series one of the oldest in the state.[80]

As of November 2009, Fairmont Senior leads the series 59-28-7; three scoreless ties and 27 shutouts have been recorded throughout the rivalry's history.[81]

East-West Stadium[]

The East-West Stadium is a central location for Fairmont Senior sports, such as football. The stadium was built in the 1930s with Works Progress Administration (a New Deal program) funding.[82] The facility includes a football/soccer/lacrosse field, track, and a swimming pool. The stadium, which covers one full city block, has an approximate capacity of six-thousand spectators.[83]

Athletic facility[]

Fairmont Senior has an athletic facility, the 201st Fairmont Senior High School Field House.[84][85]

Awards and recognition[]

Fairmont Senior is considered an "above average" school by Niche.[86] In 2020, the U.S. News & World Report ranked Fairmont Senior as 3380th in its national ranking, 10th in West Virginia, and 1st in Marion County.[87]

Fairmont Senior received the 2010 Blue Ribbon honor,[88] and in 2019, the school was recognized with the Champion of College Access and Success award for "efforts to make students aware of higher education opportunities after they graduate".[89]

Math teacher Sarah Snyder was honored by President Barack Obama with the Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching in 2016.[90] The following year, Fairmont Senior English teacher Toni Poling was recognized as the 2017 West Virginia Teacher of the Year.[91][92]

Notable alumni[]

President Ronald Reagan and Mary Lou Retton with the U.S. Olympic Team in Los Angeles, 1984. Retton attended Fairmont Senior High School.

See also[]

  • List of National Register of Historic Places entries

References[]

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