South High School (Springfield, Ohio)

Coordinates: 39°54′59″N 83°48′31″W / 39.916268°N 83.808559°W / 39.916268; -83.808559
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South High School
Address
Map
700 South Limestone Street

,
45503

Coordinates39°54′59″N 83°48′31″W / 39.916268°N 83.808559°W / 39.916268; -83.808559
Information
TypePublic
Established1960
Closed2008
School districtSpringfield City School District
Color(s)Blue and gold
Team nameWildcats

South High School was a public high school in Springfield, Ohio. It was one of two high schools in the Springfield City School District (SCSD), the other school being North High School. The school was created in 1960 when the original Springfield High School was divided into North and South High Schools.[1] South was housed in the original Springfield High School, built in 1911, and assumed the SHS school colors of blue and gold and the athletic team name Wildcats. The building was designed by Albert Pretzinger of Dayton and modeled after the Library of Congress.

South was closed in 2008 when enrollment declines in the Springfield City School District necessitated consolidating the two high schools and re-establishing Springfield High School. The new Springfield High School was built at what had been the North High School campus and the North High School building was demolished. Thanks to a large state grant, local donations, and the school district's investment, the former South High School building reopened in 2015 as the Springfield Center of Innovation: The Dome. It is still owned and operated by the Springfield City School District. SCSD operates the CareerConnectED Center and John Legend Theater within the building, and leases space in the Dome to the Global Impact STEM Academy and to Clark State Community College.[2]

Athletics[edit]

  • Springfield South and North had a cross-town rivalry. In basketball, North won 21 of the final 25 meetings between the schools.
  • The 2002-03 South football team reached the state semifinals.

Notable people[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Stafford, Tom (July 24, 2011). "'61 Springfield graduates reflect on North-South split". Springfield News-Sun. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  2. ^ Bruner, Bethany (Jan 7, 2012). "Old school sites cost city district thousands each year". Springfield News-Sun. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  3. ^ "Alaina Reed Hall's remains to be scattered over Pacific; no funeral planned". Springfield News-Sun. May 7, 2012. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  4. ^ John Legend

External links[edit]