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Enrollment
Tennessee
High School has
approximately 1,300 students enrolled for
the 2007-2008 school year.
Employees
There
are 7 administrators, 78 classroom teachers, 2 librarians, and 3
counselors.
Directions
From
Interstate 81, take Exit 3 toward Bristol. Go approximately
4 miles, then turn left at the redlight before Advance Auto Parts.
Turn right at the second redlight. The school is on the right.
From
Johnson City, take the Bristol Hwy. (Volunteer Pkwy.) into
Bristol. You will pass Lowe's, Pal's, and several more businesses.
Turn right at the redlight just past Advance Auto Parts. Turn right
at the second redlight. The school is on the right.
History
The
Bristol, Tennessee Public School System was organized in April of
1888; the Baptist Academy on Anderson Street was rented for the
girls' school, and the boys attended school in an old building on
the corner of Anderson and Tenth Streets that was commonly referred
to as the "Cornfield Academy." In 1893, the first new
public school building was built on Fifth Street next to King College.
Grades four through ten were taught in the school, which employed
seven teachers and one principal. The younger children continued
to attend school at the "Cornfield Academy" on Anderson
Street. In 1916, a new building was built on Alabama Street and
became the first official Tennessee High School, then a four year
high school. In 1939, the initial portion of the present-day Tennessee
High School including the Stone
Castle was built on Edgemont Avenue. Since that time additions
have been added at roughly ten-year intervals, the most recent being
when the entire complex was completely renovated and Viking Hall,
an 8,000 seat arena, was added to the facility in 1977.
Class
Night
Tennessee
High School's strong sense of tradition has been a source of pride
since the earliest days of the school. One of the oldest and most
treasured traditions at Tennessee High is Class Night. Just as the
school is unique in that it is the only high school in the state
that bears the name "Tennessee," it is also unique in
that it is the only school which celebrates the traditional "Class
Night" ceremony. Class Night is the formal ceremony during
which the "senior authority," the symbols and traditions
of the school, are passed down to the juniors from the graduating
seniors. On that night, the shield, which represents the honor of
the school, and the axes, which represent strength and power, are
passed on to the new senior class.
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