Mount Pleasant High School (Wilmington, Delaware)
Mount Pleasant High School | |
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Location | |
Wilmington, Delaware USA | |
Coordinates | 39°46′21″N 75°30′17″W / 39.7726°N 75.5046°WCoordinates: 39°46′21″N 75°30′17″W / 39.7726°N 75.5046°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Established | 1830 |
School district | Brandywine School District |
Principal | Heather Austin |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 908 |
Color(s) | Green, White and Gold |
Athletics | greenknightssports.com |
Mascot | Green Knights |
Yearbook | The Green Leaf |
Website | brandywineschools.org/mphs/site/default.asp |
Mount Pleasant High School is a public secondary school located in Wilmington, Delaware. The current principal is Heather Austin. There were 908 students enrolled in the fall for the 2008-2009 school year.[1] It was the first public high school in Delaware to offer the International Baccalaureate program, followed by John Dickinson High School.
History
Mount Pleasant was one of the first schools built following the passing of the free school law of 1829. On September 22, 1830, Joseph Orr sold a lot to the School Committee of School District #2 (note: School District #1 was Naamans Creek, now the Claymont Stone School). The original Mount Pleasant schoolhouse still stands today, located on an acre of land which is now part of Bellevue State Park.[2] When William DuPont Jr. remodeled Woolton Hall, now called the Bellevue Mansion, he also changed the exterior of the Mount Pleasant schoolhouse from stone to its present Colonial Revival style.
In 1865, the school moved to a new location on Philadelphia Pike, just across the street from the Mount Pleasant Methodist Church, and then again in 1932 to a much larger facility on Duncan Road (now the home of Mount Pleasant Elementary School). In 1958, Mount Pleasant High School opened at its present location on Washington Street Extension.
In 1978, the Mount Pleasant Special School District and other school districts in Delaware dissolved due to desegregation, and Mount Pleasant High School became a part of the New Castle County School District. Quinton Sterling became the first African-American principal of the high school. In 1981, the larger district split into four separate school districts (Brandywine, Christina, Colonial and Red Clay Consolidated), and Frank J. Furgele became the superintendent of the newly formed Brandywine School District.
The school celebrated their 175th anniversary in a series of events during homecoming weekend, October 14 and 15, 2005, including the inaugural Mount Pleasant Hall of Fame.
Academics
In 2008, Mount Pleasant ranked #602 in Newsweek's top 1300 high schools, which uses a ratio of the number of AP, IB and/or Cambridge tests taken by all students at a school divided by the number of graduating seniors.[3] In the spring of 2008, 220 students took IB exams and more than 100 students took AP exams.[1] Mount Pleasant's Academic Bowl team placed 2nd in the 2008 Comcast Academic Challenge of Delaware.[4]
Athletics
MPHS fields teams in football, boys' and girls' cross country, field hockey, boys' and girls' soccer, girls' volleyball, fall cheerleading, boys' and girls' basketball, boys' and girls' swimming, boys' and girls' indoor track, wrestling, winter cheerleading, baseball, softball, golf, boys' and girls' lacrosse, boys' and girls' tennis, and boys' and girls' track & field. Mount competes in the Blue Hen Conference, in Flight A. The current athletic director is Keith Neff.
Activities
Mount Pleasant is also the home of WMPH 91.7 FM, which began broadcasting on October 1, 1969, and was Delaware's only public high school radio station until McKean began broadcasting at WHMS 88.1 FM in 1998.[5]
Mount Pleasant also hosts the only completely student-run Relay for Life in the region. Over the past 5 years, over $150,000 has been raised for the American Cancer Society through this event.[6]
Mount Pleasant's chapter of the Technology Student Association has been recognized for the school's contributions to the TSA/ACS Service Project through Relay for Life. The former national president of TSA, Peter Andrews, is an alumnus of Mount Pleasant.[7]
Mount Pleasant puts on a spring musical every year. The 2008 production was The King and I starring Phoebe Rowe and Cedrick Yancey. The 2009 production was Damn Yankees starring Jordan Weagraff and Melinda Murphy. The 2010 production was Footloose starring Jordan Weagraff and Emily Ozer. The 2011 production was Les Miserables starring Donald Coggin, Ian Miller, Emily Ozer, and Josie Beichner. The 2012 production was Beauty and the Beast starring Brian Bowersock and Emily Ozer. The 2013 production was Godspell starring Ian Miller and Brandon Leung. The 2014 production was Hairspray starring Maren Wood, Hannah Schmeck, James Williams, Annie Garner, John Kee, Anthony Parker, Sam Dimov, Christopher Johnson, Lizzie Sprague and Kiki Bacot. The 2015 musical was Rent.
Mount Pleasant is home to a thriving music department, including many bands and choirs. The choral department, under the direction of Amy Beattie, is composed of a chorale, concert choir, women's choir, men's choir, show choir, gospel choir, jazz choir, and the Elite Eight and Sweet Adeline's a cappella groups. The instrumental music department, under the direction of Brian Drumbore, includes a symphonic band, concert band, jazz band, marching band, early music ensemble, and guitar quartet.
References
- 1 2 "Mount Pleasant High School - School Profiles". Delaware State Department of Education.
- ↑ "Mount Pleasant School".
- ↑ "America's Top Public High Schools 2008". Newsweek. 2008-05-17. Archived from the original on October 3, 2012.
- ↑ "Academic Bowl".
- ↑ "WMPH History and Documents".
- ↑ "Relay for Life".
- ↑ "National TSA Officers".
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