Arlington Heights High School
Arlington Heights High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
4501 West Freeway , 76107 United States | |
Coordinates | 32°43′55″N 97°23′9″W / 32.73194°N 97.38583°W |
Information | |
School type | Public secondary |
Established | 1920[1] |
School district | Fort Worth Independent School District |
Principal | Justin Barrett |
Teaching staff | 121.60 (FTE)[2] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1,934 (2022–23)[2] |
Student to teacher ratio | 15.90[2] |
Campus | Urban |
Color(s) | Royal blue and gold |
Athletics conference | University Interscholastic League 5A |
Nickname | Heights |
Rival | Paschal High School |
Newspaper | Jacket Journal |
Website | School website |
Arlington Heights High School (AHHS, Heights) is a secondary school located in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. The school serves grades 9 through 12, and is a part of the Fort Worth Independent School District. Its mascot is the Yellow Jacket and its colors are blue and gold.
Arlington Heights High School serves western portions of Fort Worth including the Como, Arlington Heights, Ridglea, Meadows West[3] and Rivercrest neighborhoods, as well as the city of Westover Hills.[4]
History
[edit]Arlington Heights High School was established in 1922 and hosted 715 students in its inaugural year. The current building was built in 1937 based on a design by Preston Geren Sr. Students from the area had previously attended Stripling High School, which is now a feeder middle school.
Arlington Heights was generally affluent and White until the late 1960s. Black students at the time attended Como High School, which no longer exists and was merged with Arlington Heights at its closing.
In 1968, Western Hills High School was hosted in temporary buildings at Arlington Heights[5] until its campus opened in 1969 on a 25-acre tract in West Fort Worth at 3600 Boston Avenue.[6]
As of 1996, students could be bused to AHHS from the Butler subsidized housing in downtown Fort Worth and from various communities in southeast Fort Worth with racial and ethnic minorities.[3]
Students at Arlington Heights refer to their school as "The Hill", as the main building offers a view of the Trinity River valley to the south, from which AHHS is visible.
In 1996, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram called the school a "scholastically touted institution that draws students from private schools."[3]
Description
[edit]The school occupies a red brick building visible from Interstate 30 (West Freeway).[3]
The main building houses 74 classrooms, a library, band hall, auditorium, gymnasium, workrooms and administrative offices. Outside buildings include a cafeteria, second gymnasium, field houses with concessions stands and a weight room. A new wing opened in the fall of 2004 and houses six classrooms and a state of-the-art dance studio. A detatched cafeteria with outside seating was built and opened in 2019. [7] The surrounding grounds are covered with tennis courts, baseball, softball, a unique multi-purpose athletic facility, soccer and football fields and an all-weather track that is open for public use.[8]
Student body
[edit]In 2014, of the approximately 1,800 students, 46% were Hispanic, 29% were White and 22% were Black. 45% were eligible for free or reduced lunch.[9]
Arlington Heights' student-athletes compete in the UIL 5A classification for 12 varsity sports.
Notable incidents
[edit]In 1963, a number of Paschal High School students attacked a crowd of Arlington Heights students using blunt weapons, Molotov cocktails and a plane that dropped toilet paper with Paschal's school colors.[10] This incident led to 46 arrests, and a Heights High School bonfire being the center of a near riot.[11] In the incident, carloads of Paschal boys and exes descended on a crowd of 500 Heights students at Benbrook Lake with an armory of weapons including baseball bats, lead pipes, whips and Molotov cocktails. A private-plane flyover by a 20-year-old pilot, a 1962 Paschal graduate, dropped rolls of school-color purple-and-white toilet paper that fluttered down onto the Heights crowd, and a 1948 sedan covered in gasoline-soaked mattresses and labeled "The Panther Ram Car" was set afire by a burly graduate and rolled toward the bonfire woodpile. There was also a ground assault by boys with bows and arrows, storming over the spillway and sailing arrows in a scene a county deputy compared to a frontier Native American attack. When all was said and done there was only one injury, when wrecker driver Junior Slayton, 33, was grazed by buckshot while towing away a student's car.[12] One week later, a visiting President John F. Kennedy smiled and asked at the mention of Paschal High School, "Isn't that the school with its own air force?"[12]
In 1979, a Paschal student stole a bulldozer from a county construction site and rammed it into the Arlington Heights field house the day before the annual Heights-Paschal football game, destroying the field house.[13] The incident resulted in criminal convictions and a nationwide reassessment of safety and security measures, starting a national discussion about youth violence and vandalism on many television and radio programs.[14]
Notable alumni
[edit]- Michael A. Andrews, United States Representative from Texas (1983–1995)
- Leon Bridges, singer
- Blake Brockermeyer, former NFL player for the Carolina Panthers, Chicago Bears and Denver Broncos, and former Texas Longhorns lineman
- Milton Brown, "father of Western swing"
- Betty Buckley, Tony Award-winning actress and singer[15]
- Tim Curry, Tarrant County district attorney, 1972–2009
- T. Cullen Davis, son of oil tycoon Stinky Davis; accused and acquitted twice for murder at his mansion
- John Denver, folk rock musician[3]
- Willie Flores, United States Coast Guard Medal recipient[16]
- Tony Franklin, former placekicker for the Philadelphia Eagles, New England Patriots and Miami Dolphins[15]
- Pete Geren, United States Representative from Texas (1989–1997) and Secretary of the Army (2007–2009)[15]
- Preston Geren Jr., architect
- Turner Gill, former national champion Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback; former head football coach at Liberty University and the University of Kansas[17]
- Robert Allen Hale, criminal and self-proclaimed pilgrim of the Alaskan wilderness
- Gunilla Hutton, cast member on Hee Haw and Petticoat Junction
- Martha Hyer, actress nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
- Joe K. Longley, former president of the Texas State Bar[18]
- Delbert McClinton, Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter and musician
- Ronnie Mills, former swimmer; won gold and bronze medals at the age of 17 at the 1968 Summer Olympics
- Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of president John F. Kennedy (did not graduate)
- Bill Paxton, actor and film director
- Mike Renfro, former NFL player for the Houston Oilers and Dallas Cowboys; college player at TCU
- Sergio Reyes, former U.S. Olympic boxer
- Chuck Reynolds, football player
- Dusty Rhodes, Hall of Fame professional wrestler, known as "The American Dream"
- A'Shawn Robinson, All-American football player, University of Alabama; former defensive tackle for the Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Rams and former defensive end for the New York Giants, currently a defensive end for the Carolina Panthers
- Tom Schieffer, former U.S. ambassador to Australia and Japan; candidate for Democratic nomination for governor of Texas
- Tommy Thompson, author
- Marc Veasey, congressman
- William Walker, Metropolitan Opera baritone
- Van Williams, actor, The Green Hornet
- Tariq Woolen, NFL player for the Seattle Seahawks
Feeder patterns
[edit]Students attending the following feeder schools are zoned to attend Arlington Heights High School:[19]
Elementary schools
[edit]- Burton Hill
- Como
- M.L. Phillips
- North Hi Mount
- Ridglea Hills
- South Hi Mount
Middle schools
[edit]- W.C. Stripling
- William Monnig
Rivalries
[edit]- R. L. Paschal High School, Fort Worth (listed by Texas Football Monthly as the oldest ongoing high-school rivalry in Texas)[20]
- Trimble Tech High School
- Western Hills High School
References
[edit]- ^ "Arlington Heights High School". Archived from the original (English) on December 10, 2008. Retrieved December 29, 2008.
- ^ a b c "Search for Public Schools - School Detail for ARLINGTON HEIGHTS H S". nces.ed.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Weiner, Hollace. "Low scores at Arlington Heights called no surprise." Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Monday August 5, 1996. 9 Metro. Retrieved on December 12, 2011.
- ^ Kennedy, Bud. "Teens' talk turns to tales of hate and killing." Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Thursday March 26, 1992. 2 News. Retrieved on December 12, 2011. "News central: Millionaires and wealthy families live in Westover Hills and the Rivercrest neighborhood, and their children go to Arlington Heights High."
- ^ "For Western Hills HS". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. September 7, 1968. p. 4. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
- ^ "For Western Hills High". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. January 28, 1969. p. 2. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
- ^ "Arlington Heights High School - Dennett Construction". Dennett Construction. Retrieved September 4, 2024.
- ^ "Arlington Heights High School - Home". schools.fortworthisd.net. Archived from the original on February 8, 2007. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
- ^ "Arlington Heights High School".
- ^ 50 years ago, Paschal flew into history, with a high school prank gone wild Fort Worth Star Telegram
- ^ KENNEDY, BUD (September 5, 2013). "50 years ago, Paschal flew into history, with a high school prank gone wild Fort Worth Star Telegram". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
- ^ a b Kennedy, Bud (September 13, 2022). "In 1963, Paschal flew into history, with a high school prank gone wild". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Retrieved February 16, 2024.
- ^ Jarvis, Jan (October 17, 2022). "Doomsday". D Magazine. Retrieved February 16, 2024.
- ^ JARVIS, JAN (July 1, 1985). "DOOMSDAY". D Magazine. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
- ^ a b c Arlington Heights Yearbook
- ^ "Getting his due Coast Guard hero receives honor posthumously". Fort Worth Star Telegram. September 17, 2000. Retrieved December 2, 2011. (subscription required.
- ^ Turner Gill Official High School Football Statistics, Arlington Heights Yearbook
- ^ Patricia Busa McConnico (June 2018). "The Good Fight". Texas Bar Journal. p. 448.
- ^ "SchoolSite Locator".
- ^ Texas High School Monthly, Fall 2008