Evansville Central High School Explained

Central High School
Evansville Central High School
Location:5400 North First Avenue
Zipcode:47710
Country:United States
Coordinates:38.0292°N -87.5792°W
Established:1854
Grades:9-12
Principal:Andrew Freeman
Head Name2:Assistant Principals
Head2:Chris Jones
Regina St. Clair
Enrollment:1,090 (2022-23)[1]
Teaching Staff:67.89 (FTE)
Ratio:16.06
Team Name:Bears
Free Label2:Gym Capacity
Free 2:3,300
Website:Evansville Central High School

Evansville Central High School, also known as Central High, is a public high school on the north side of Evansville, Indiana. It is the oldest high school in continuous operation west of the Allegheny Mountains. It was established in 1854 as Evansville High School. The name was changed to Central High School in 1918 when FJ Reitz High School was built.

Central moved to its current location on the far north side of Evansville in the early 1970s. It is sometimes called "Vanderburgh Central" because of its location near the geographic center of Vanderburgh County, in addition to its status as the county's oldest high school. For many years, it was the northernmost high school in the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation; it was four miles northwest of Evansville North High School. However, with the completion of the new North High School campus in northern Vanderburgh County, geographic correctness was restored to the name.

Academics

Central High School received an "A" as its final letter grade for school accountability.[2]

As of October 2024, Central High School is ranked 62nd in Indiana, and 2nd in the EVSC by USNews. 37% of students participate in an AP course.[3]

Notable alumni

Academy of Science and Medicine

Founded in 2011, Academy of Science and Medicine, also known as ASM, is a public half-day high school program hosted within and sharing faculty with Central High School. The program is open to students in the EVSC, as well as schools in the surrounding area. The program employs roughly 16 teachers and enrolls over 250 students from area schools.[11] ASM was founded as the Medical Professions Academy, or MPA, but was renamed in 2023 to Academy of Science and Medicine. The EVSC purchased a building in downtown Evansville to be used as a future expansion to the program.[12] The goal of the program is to prepare students for college and post-secondary education, with a focus on careers and degrees in medicine and science. The program integrates science, english, and technology into its curriculum.[13] [14] ASM has partnerships with local universities, including University of Southern Indiana, University of Evansville, Ivy Tech Community College, Purdue University and Vanderbilt University. The partnerships offer college visits and scholarships to prospective students.[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Central High School. National Center for Education Statistics. March 19, 2024.
  2. Web site: Indiana Department of Education. Indiana Department of Education. 13 June 2016.
  3. Web site: Central High School. 14 October 2024.
  4. Web site: Andy Benes stats. baseball-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. March 31, 2019.
  5. News: May 31, 1948 . Lowell Galloway is Cannelton Cage Coach. 8 . Messenger-Inquirer . Owensboro, KY . Mr Galloway graduated from Central High School, Evansville, where he played basketball for four years... He was in military service and on his discharge he played professional basketball for a year with Kautskys.
  6. News: No No. 2 spot for Hamilton . The Indianapolis News. July 9, 1992 . A2 . David L . Haase. A young Lee Hamilton led the Evansville Central High School basketball team to the 1948 boys finals.
  7. Web site: Preston Mattingly's unlikely journey: MLB draft at 18, college basketball at 28, back to MLB. Dana Hunsinger. Benbow. The Indianapolis Star.
  8. News: Wersich . Carol. Central High graduate puts his money where his computer is. Evansville Courier & Press. May 11, 2008 . March 31, 2019.
  9. News: Webb . Jon. Iceland has a new president. And she went to Evansville's Central High School. Evansville Courier & Press. June 6, 2024 . June 6, 2024.
  10. Web site: Mayor Winnecke's Biography. City of Evansville, Indiana. March 31, 2019.
  11. Web site: Academy of Science and Medicine.
  12. Web site: EVSC approves the purchase of a portion of the former Welborn Clinic downtown. 6 February 2024 .
  13. Web site: Academy of Science and Medicine Brochure.
  14. Web site: USI, EVSC partnership to benefit MPA students.
  15. Web site: Academy of Science and Medicine Community Partners.