Governor Thomas Johnson High School

for schools of the same name.

Governor Thomas Johnson High School

Home of the Patriots
Address
1501 North Market Street
Frederick, Maryland, 21701
United States
Coordinates 39°26′2″N 77°24′18″W / 39.43389°N 77.40500°W / 39.43389; -77.40500Coordinates: 39°26′2″N 77°24′18″W / 39.43389°N 77.40500°W / 39.43389; -77.40500
Information
Type Public high school
Opened September 6, 1966
School district Frederick County Public Schools
Principal Jethro Reid
Teaching staff 89.00 (FTE)
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1,482 (2013-2014)
Student to teacher ratio 16.73
Campus Small City
Campus size 40 acres (160,000 m2)
Color(s) Red, White, and Blue
Athletics conference Central Maryland Conference
Nickname Patriots
Rival Frederick High School
Urbana High School
Newspaper TJ Chronicle
Yearbook Tricorn
Feeder schools Monocacy Middle School & Gov. Thomas Johnson Middle School
Website education.fcps.org/gtjhs/
[1][2]

Governor Thomas Johnson High School (GTJHS) is a Four-Year public high school in Frederick, MD, Frederick County, Maryland, United States. The school is home to the Arts and Communications Academy, an auditioned-only Visual and Performing Arts program for talented students in Frederick County from grades 10th to 12th. The school is also home to the Naval Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps for Frederick County.

Thomas Johnson

Governor Thomas Johnson

The school is named after former Maryland Governor Thomas Johnson who was the first post-colonial governor of the state. He was also a delegate to the Continental Congress and an associate justice on the Supreme Court. Johnson himself received no formal education and taught himself the law while working for an attorney and qualified aged 28.[3]

Buildings

The school is located on Maryland Route 355, north of 14th Street, and southeast of U.S. 15. The building has 292,940 square feet (27,215 m2) of space located on 40 acres (16 ha) of land.[4] The address is 1501 N. Market Street in Frederick, MD 21701.

Students

Gov.Thomas Johnson High has 1,482 students and the demographics are as follows for 2013-2014 year 44.8% White 24.3% African American 19.4% Hispanic 6.0% Multiracial 5.2% Asian Thomas Johnson's graduation rate has been steadily rising over the past 12 years. In 2007 the school graduated 93.85%, the highest rate in the past 12 years and The school had a low of 84.91% in 1999.[5]

The school's population had been steadily rising over the years, but has been decreasing over the last 4 years due to the redistricting of some students to Oakdale High School.

Student population[6]
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
1,339 1,375 1,396 1,407 1,457 1,503 1,548 1,689 1,743 1,858 1,953 1,925 1,987 1,994 1,995 2,022 1,994 2,000 1,681 1,583 1,524 1,489
Governor Thomas Johnson High School

Academies

Governor Thomas Johnson High School is home to 2 "academies" for Frederick County Public Schools.

The "Arts and Communications Academy" has been at GTJHS since the late 1980's.[7] ACA, as it is called, offers various college level classes pertaining to the arts for students in 10th, 11th, and 12th grade.[8]

The Naval Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps was a new addition to GTJHS for the 2015-16 school year.[9] The program had previously been held at Linganore High School.[10] The NJROTC features an orienteering team, a rifle team, and a drill team.

Sports

State Champions

  • 2013 - Boys' Cross Country
  • 2012 - Boys' Indoor Track & Field
  • 2011 - Boys' Outdoor Track & Field
  • 2010 - Boys' Outdoor Track & Field
  • 2010 - Boys' Indoor Track & Field
  • 2009 - Boys' Outdoor Track & Field
  • 2009 - Boys' Indoor Track & Field
  • 2006 - Boys' Soccer[11]
  • 2002 - Baseball[12]
  • 2001 - Girls' Soccer[13]
  • 2000 - Boys' Track & Field[14]
  • 1999 - Boys' Basketball[15]
  • 1997 - Boys' Basketball
  • 1997 - Girls' Soccer
  • 1994 - Softball[16]
  • 1992 - Baseball
  • 1989 - Girls' Basketball[17]
  • 1988 - Boys' Basketball
  • 1986 - Boys' Basketball
  • 1985 - Boys' Basketball
  • 1983 - Baseball
  • 1983 - Girls' Basketball
  • 1982 - Boys' Basketball
  • 1982 - Football[18]
  • 1975 - Boys' Basketball

Notable alumni

References and notes

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, November 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.