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Alcester-Hudson High School

Coordinates: 43°01′29″N 96°37′26″W / 43.02466098568542°N 96.62375283830032°W / 43.02466098568542; -96.62375283830032
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alcester-Hudson High School
Location
Map
409 East 6th Street
Alcester, SD 57001

United States
Coordinates43°01′29″N 96°37′26″W / 43.02466098568542°N 96.62375283830032°W / 43.02466098568542; -96.62375283830032
Information
TypePublic
School districtAlcester-Hudson School District 61-1
PrincipalJason Van Engen
Head of schoolTim Rhead, Superentendent
Staff8.99 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Number of students104 (2022-2023)[1]
Student to teacher ratio11.57[1]
Color(s)Royal blue and gold
    [2]
AthleticsBasketball, cross country, football, golf, track, volleyball, and wrestling
Athletics conferenceTri-Valley Conference
MascotCubs[2]
NewspaperBear Facts
School SongOriginal
Websitealcester-hudson.k12.sd.us

Alcester-Hudson High School is the main secondary school for grades 9-12 located in Alcester, South Dakota.[3] The high school serves the cities of Alcester, South Dakota and Hudson, South Dakota.

History

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The first students graduated from the Alcester's full high school in May 1911. The graduating class consisted of two girls, Ethel Johnson and Myra Weed.

Alcester-Hudson High School was formed when Alcester High School of Alcester, South Dakota was merged with Hudson High School of Hudson, South Dakota.

School leadership

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  • Tim Rhead, K-6 Principal, District Superintendent
  • Natalie Stene, Business Manager
  • Jason Van Engen, 7-12 Principal

Sports

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The school offers students the ability to play in girls & boys basketball, volleyball, football, wrestling, golf and girls & boys track.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Alcester-Hudson High School - 01". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved September 11, 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Alcester-Hudson High School". South Dakota High School Activities Association. Retrieved 2024-04-17.
  3. ^ "Cheese maker to teacher: Schools get creative in recruiting". Argus Leader, Sept. 30, 2014, Patrick Anderson
  4. ^ "These Cubs work toward 'Blue Ribbon' tradition". Sioux City Journal, Tim Gallagher, Oct 9, 2005
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