Pine Bluff High School(PBHS) is acomprehensivepublic high school inPine Bluff, Arkansas,United States. It, a part of thePine Bluff School District,is the largest of two public high schools in the Pine Bluff city limits and three public high schools inJefferson County.Established in 1868, the school's interscholastic sports programs are one of the nation's most successful with a football national championship and one of the state's highest number of state championships in football, baseball and track and field.
Pine Bluff High School | |
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Address | |
711 West 11th Street , Arkansas 71601 United States | |
Coordinates | 34°13′9″N92°0′34″W/ 34.21917°N 92.00944°W |
Information | |
School type | Public |
Motto | Committed to Excellence |
Founded | 1868 |
School board | Pine Bluff School District |
NCESDistrict ID | 05000026[1] |
Superintendent | Michael Robinson |
CEEB code | 042030 |
NCESSchool ID | 0500002600867[2] |
Principal | Michael Nellums |
Faculty | 67.71 (onFTEbasis)[2] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1,248 (2016–17)[3] |
Student to teacher ratio | 14.78[2] |
Color(s) | Cardinal and white |
Mascot | Zebra |
Nickname | Zebras, The Z's, Z's |
Team name | Pine Bluff High Zebras |
Communities served | (beginning in fall 2023) Portions ofPine Bluff,Altheimer,Sherrill,Wabbaseka Unincorporated areas:Lake Dick,New Gascony,Pastoria,Plum Bayou,Sweden,Tucker,andWright |
Affiliation | Arkansas Activities Association |
Website | www |
History
editEstablished in 1868, Pine Bluff High School is one of the state's oldest schools and pre-dates the opening of Branch Normal College, which would later becomeUniversity of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.In 1924, Pine Bluff High School became a charter member and accredited by the North Central Association, now namedAdvancED.In 1925, the school's football team, coached by Foy Hammons, was crowned National Champions when it defeatedBaton Rouge High Schoolin theHigh School Football National Championshipgame by the score 26 to 0. The 1925 squad gained 8,588 total yards and held this national single-season record for 73 years and has remained as the state record.[4][5]
Initially theDollarway School District(DSD) sent older white students to Pine Bluff High and other area high schools, as it did not have its own high school for white students nor one for black students.[6]In 1955 the Pine Bluff school district stopped accepting Dollarway students as Pine Bluff High had too many students.[7]
In 2017 the State of Arkansas removed Pine Bluff High from a list of schools in academic distress.[8]
The attendance boundary map of Pine Bluff High remained the same for the 2021–2022 school year, when the Pine Bluff district will absorb the DSD and begin operatingDollarway High School.[9]In 2023, the high school had 583 students.[10]That year, the district announced that Dollarway High would merge into Pine Bluff High.[11]
TheArkansas Department of Educationhad made an agreement with the school district to redevelop Pine Bluff High, which would mean razing existing buildings and establishing new ones.[11]
In 2024 the district moved students to the former Robey Middle School while the new high school was built.[12]
Campus
editThe school's campus consists of multiple buildings located primarily between West 8th and 11th streets (north and south) and Olive and Poplar streets (East and West). Major facilities include the McGeorge Building that houses the main administrative offices and the Little Theater, the Trice Building and Trice Gym, the Patterson Building that contains classrooms, the Arts Building, the Student Union, tennis courts, athletic fieldhouse and ROTC building, the Hill-Alford Softball Field, and Jordan Stadium that is used for football games and track meets.
Attendance boundary
editEffective fall 2023, the high school's attendance boundary will mirror the district's service area.[11]This service area includes sections of Pine Bluff, as well asAltheimer,Sherrill,andWabbaseka.[13]
It also includes variousunincorporated areasincludingHardin,[14]Lake Dick,[13][15]Linwood,[16]Moscow,New Gascony,Noble Lake,[13][15]Pastoria,Plum Bayou,[17]Sweden,[13][15]Tucker,[16]andWright.[17]
Curriculum
editThe assumed course of study follows the Smart Core curriculum developed by theArkansas Department of Education(ADE), which requires students complete 22 units prior to graduation. Students complete regular courses and exams and may selectAdvanced Placement(AP) coursework and exams that may lead to receiving college credit. In addition to being accredited by the ADE, Pine Bluff High School is a charter member and is accredited byAdvancED(formerly North Central Association).[18]
In 2012, Pine Bluff High School was listed and unranked in the Best High Schools report fromU.S. News & World Report.[19]
Athletics
editThe Pine Bluff High School mascot is theZebrawithcardinalandwhiteserving as the school colors.
For 2012–14, the Pine Bluff Zebras compete in the 7A Classification—the state's largest classification—within the 7A/6A South Conference. The Zebras participate in numerous interscholastic sports and events administered by theArkansas Activities Associationincluding: football, basketball (boys/girls), cheer, cross country (boys/girls), soccer (boys), baseball, softball, swimming (boys/girls), tennis (boys/girls), and track and field (boys/girls).[20]
Football
edit- The Zebras football team have one of the most successful programs in the nation, which includes 711 all-time wins (as of 2014) and 24 state championships between 1915 and 2015 including three consecutive titles in 1993, 1994 and 1995.[21]Both the 1993 and 1995 squads finished 14-0 seasons and were ranked No. 19 and No. 22 in the nation byUSA Today,respectively. In 2010, synthetic turf was installed at Jordan Stadium, and the field was named theTorii HunterField.[22]
- The 1925 squad (16–0) won theHigh School Football National Championshipand still maintains single season state records with 16 wins, 8,588 total yards gained and a national-record 8,081 rushing yards gained. In 1930, future Pro Football Hall of FamerDon Hutsoncaught 5 touchdown passes in a game, which still stands as an Arkansas' state record (tied twice since then).[5]
- The Zebras have produced severalPARADEAll-American High School Football Teamselections to include:
- 1963 – Gordon Norwood, Back
- 1968 – Bill Kennedy, Lineman
- 1984 – Eric Mitchel, Quarterback
Basketball
edit- The Zebras boys basketball squad has raised 13 state (classification) championships between 1923 and 2015 along with two (overall) championship banners (1977, 1990), the latter of which is no longer contested. Pine Bluff teams won three consecutive titles in 1933, 1934 and 1935. The most recent coming in 2015, when the 6th seeded Zebras, led by Coach Clarence Finley upset three #1 seeds en route to the Arkansas State Championship.
Baseball
edit- The Pine Bluff Zebras baseball team is one of the nation's and state's most successful programs with a state-record 10state baseball championshiptitles (tied-10th national all-time titles) from 1959 through 1995, including four consecutive titles - "Dynasty Years" (1983–86).[21]As of 2012, the Zebras have been to 15 state title games, 19 state semi-finals, 37 state tournament appearances and 61 state tournament wins.[5]Coach Billy Bock was named National Coach of the Decade for the 1980s byUSA Today.
Track & field
edit- The Zebras track and field teams have been competitive throughout most of the school's history with the boys squad winning 14 state championships between 1971 and 2000, going undefeated and earning a top-3 national ranking in 1981 coached by Andrew Butler during a period known as the "decade of dominance." The 1981 team also produced 7 High School All-Americans. The girls squad has won six state championships between 1981 and 2002. Butler was inducted into the Arkansas Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1999.
Notable alumni
edit- John Barfield- FormerMLBplayer (Texas Rangers)
- Mark Bradley- Professional football player (Chicago Bears,Kansas City Chiefs,andTampa Bay Buccaneers).
- Danny Bradley- former professional football player andDallas Cowboysexecutive.
- Billy Bock(Educator/coach, 1982–96)—Inductee,American Baseball CoachesHall of Fame, National High School Coach of the Century.[23]
- Andrew Butler- (Educator/coach, 1973–1993)-Inductee-1999, Arkansas Track and Field Hall of Fame and the Arkansas High School Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
- Bill Carr- Olympic Gold Medalist.
- Monte Coleman- former professional football player (Washington Redskins), Head Football Coach (University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff).
- Rhonda Coullet- Singer-actress.
- Jay Dickey(1957) - Politician; U.S. Congressman.
- Jeff Gross(1984) - Former Major League Baseball Scout (Texas Rangers/Chicago Cubs) Co-Owner: PB Locomotives Professional Baseball Club
- John Gross(1978) - Former Major League Baseball Scout (Texas Rangers/Chicago Cubs) Co-Owner: PB Locomotives Professional Baseball Club
- Jackie Harris- Professional football player (Green Bay Packers,Tampa Bay Buccaneers,Tennessee TitansandDallas Cowboys).
- Torii Hunter- FormerMLBPlayer (Minnesota Twins,Los Angeles Angels,Detroit Tigers)
- Don Hutson(1930) - Professional football player (Green Bay Packers); charter member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
- Mike Jeffcoat- FormerMLBplayer (Cleveland Indians,San Francisco Giants,Texas Rangers,Florida Marlins); collegiate baseball coach.
- David Johnson- Professional football player (Pittsburgh Steelers).
- Bill LaFitte- Professional football player (Brooklyn Tigers)
- Martha Mitchell(1937) - wife ofJohn N. Mitchell,United States Attorney General under President Richard Nixon.
- Smokie Norful(1991) - Gospel singer.
- Annie Reinhart(1961) - Missouri state representative from 1997 to 2004.
- Willie Roaf(1988) - Professional football player; inductee, Pro Football Hall of Fame (2012).
- Pamela A. Smith- police officer
- Dennis Swilley- Professional football player (Minnesota Vikings).
References
edit- ^ "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for Pine Bluff School District".National Center for Education Statistics.Institute of Education Sciences.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^abc "Search for Public Schools - Pine Bluff High School (0500002600867)".National Center for Education Statistics.Institute of Education Sciences.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^"PINE BLUFF HIGH SCHOOL".National Center for Education Statistics.RetrievedFebruary 26,2019.
- ^Demirel, Evin (July 16, 2012)."Arkansas Boasts Long Tradition of Producing Quality Running Backs".ArkansasSports360.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^abc"2012–13 Arkansas High School Sports Record Book"(PDF).Arkansas Activities Association. July 1, 2012. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on May 31, 2013.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^Pickhardt, John B. (Winter 2009)."We Don't Intend to Have a Story: Integration in the Dollarway School District".The Arkansas Historical Quarterly.68(4).Arkansas Historical Association:357–387.JSTOR40543600.- Cited page 359.
- ^Pickhardt, John B. (Winter 2009)."We Don't Intend to Have a Story: Integration in the Dollarway School District".The Arkansas Historical Quarterly.68(4).Arkansas Historical Association:357–387.JSTOR40543600.- Cited page 360.
- ^Lyon, John (February 10, 2017)."Arkansas Board of Education removes 10 schools, one district from academic distress list".Times Record.RetrievedFebruary 23,2021.
- ^"Annexation/Transition FAQ".Pine Bluff School District.RetrievedFebruary 23,2021.
- ^Murrell, I.C. (March 3, 2023)."Pine Bluff School District stakeholders react to consolidation".Arkansas Democrat Gazette.RetrievedMarch 3,2023.
- ^abcMurrell, I. C. (March 1, 2023)."Pine Bluff School District will consolidate junior, senior highs this fall".Arkansas Democrat Gazette.RetrievedMarch 3,2023.
- ^Horbacewicz, Sarah (March 6, 2024)."Pine Bluff to house students at former junior high campus while new high school is built".THV11.RetrievedMarch 18,2024.
- ^abcd"2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Jefferson County, AR"(PDF).U.S. Census Bureau.Archived(PDF)from the original on June 29, 2021.RetrievedJune 29,2021.- The map shows Dollarway School District as not yet merged into Pine Bluff School District.
- ^Pickhardt, p. 358. Since the Hardin district joined the Dollarway district, it in turn joined the Pine Bluff district.
- ^abc"General Highway Map Jefferson County, Arkansas"(PDF).Arkansas Department of Transportation.Archived(PDF)from the original on June 29, 2021.RetrievedMarch 5,2021.- See locations of Lake Dick, Moscow, New Gascony, Noble Lake, and Sweden
- ^ab"ConsolidationAnnex_from_1983.xls."Arkansas Department of Education.Retrieved on July 31, 2017. Note that Plum Bayou consolidated into the Wabbaseka Tucker school district in 1983, the Linwood district consolidated into Pine Bluff in 1984, then the Altheimer-Sherrill and Wabbaseka Tucker school districts consolidated into Altheimer Unified in 1993, which in turn consolidated into Dollarway in 2006, and then will consolidate into Pine Bluff on July 1, 2021. Therefore this district serves Linwood and has done so before the consolidation, and began serving Tucker and Plum Bayou effective July 1, 2021.
- ^ab"School closures hit a community".The Pine Bluff Commercial.April 11, 2013.Archivedfrom the original on August 4, 2017.RetrievedAugust 4,2017.
The former Altheimer district included students from Altheimer, Wabbaseka, Sherrill, Tucker, Pastoria, Wright and the Plum Bayou communities.
-Alternate locationArchivedDecember 27, 2016, at theWayback Machineat theArkansas Department of Education(PDF page 3/13) - ^"School Profile, Pine Bluff High School".RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^"Best High Schools 2012".U.S. News & World Report.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^"School Profile, Pine Bluff High School".Arkansas Activities Association.RetrievedOctober 26,2012.
- ^ab"National High School Record Books".National Federation of State High School Associations. Archived fromthe originalon August 15, 2012.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^"Annual Report to the Public (2010)"(PDF).Pine Bluff School District. September 21, 2010.RetrievedOctober 27,2012.
- ^"Inductees, Class of 1996".Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame.RetrievedOctober 19,2012.