Aberdeen High School (Washington)

J. M. Weatherwax High School, commonly Aberdeen High School, is a four-year public high school located in Aberdeen, Washington, the flagship of the Aberdeen School District. The AHS mascot is the Bobcat.

Aberdeen High School
Address
410 North G Street

,
United States
Coordinates46.98°N 123.818°W / 46.98; -123.818
Information
TypePublic
Established1908 (1908)
School districtAberdeen S.D.
PrincipalSherri Northington
Faculty52
Grades9–12
Enrollment868 (May 2013)
Color(s)Blue and gold
   
MascotBobcat
Websitewww.asd5.org/Domain/40

Demographics

As of the 2012–2013 school year, there were 868-926 students enrolled, 52.3% of which were male, and 47.7% female. 65.2% of the students were White, 22.6% Hispanic/Latino, 3.8% American Indian, 6.2% Asian-American, and 0.8% African American. There were 52 classroom teachers, for an average of 16.7 students per teacher in May 2013.[1]

Sports

Aberdeen competes in WIAA Class 2A, and is a member of the Evergreen Conference in District Four. The following sports are offered:

Boys' sports:

Girls' sports:

Fire

The Weatherwax building of Aberdeen High School burned down in 2002

On Saturday, 5 January 2002, the Weatherwax building of Aberdeen High School, one of Aberdeen's most historical buildings (built in 1909), burned to the ground[2] just after midnight. The Weatherwax building housed the school library, counseling office, and many classrooms. Students were spread out over the remaining campus until the new school was built.

The grand opening of the new building and official dedication ceremony was held on August 25, 2007. The new high school building is now open for the school year, starting 4 September 2007. Parts of the masonry from the original Weatherwax building have been incorporated into the walls of the current one, including an old concrete sign reading "J. M. Weatherwax" inside the main entrance.

Notable alumni

References

  1. OSPI school report card 2012-13. Retrieved 2013-11-17
  2. Kamb, Lewis (7 January 2002). "Aberdeen history burns". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Archived from the original on 2008-01-29. Retrieved 2007-03-01.


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