Newark High School | |
Streetaddress: | 314 Granville Street |
City: | Newark, Ohio |
County: | (Licking County) |
Zipcode: | 43055 |
Country: | USA |
Coordinates: | 40.0658°N -82.4189°W |
District: | Newark City Schools |
Superintendent: | David L. Lewis[1] |
Principal: | Tom Bowman |
Enrollment: | 1,424 (2022–23)[2] |
Teaching Staff: | 71.12 (FTE) |
Ratio: | 20.02 |
Type: | Public, coeducational high school |
Grades: | 9-12 |
Conference: | Ohio Capital Conference |
Fightsong: | Across the Field |
Motto: | It's a Great Time to be a cat! |
Accreditation: | North Central Association of Colleges and Schools[3] |
Rival: | Lancaster High School (Ohio), Zanesville High School |
Team Name: | Wildcats[4] |
Colors: | Crimson and white |
Yearbook: | The Reveille |
Opened: | 1961 |
Free Label3: | Athletic Director |
Free Text3: | Jeffery Quackenbush |
Homepage: | newarkschools.us |
Newark High School is a public high school in Newark, Ohio. It houses a little more than 2,000 students. It is the only high school in the Newark City Schools district.
An additional 150 students attend the Career and Technical Education Center (C-TEC) associated with the school. Newark High School was built in 1959 and opened in 1961. The school underwent a massive construction project beginning in the Summer of 2010 and completed in the Spring of 2013 to convert the school into one building with 6 classroom wings, a student commons, a gymnasium, an auditorium, and the facility in which the entire district's lunches are produced. Newark plays division I athletics in the Ohio Division of the Ohio Capital Conference. Major athletics rivalries are with Lancaster High School and Zanesville High School.
The school's C-TEC satellite program includes a broadcasting department, which enables students to participate in activities such as operating a closed-circuit television station.
The school's Latin Club functions as a local chapter of both the Ohio Junior Classical League (OJCL)[5] and National Junior Classical League (NJCL).[6]
The Lawrence E. Griffin Performing Arts Center was built in 1970. James Swearingen wrote the piece "Proud Spirit" for Lawence E. Griffin and was first performed by the Pride of Newark at the dedication of the auditorium. The NHS auditorium seats 1047 people. The first recording made there was of the NHS Choirs on April 28 and May 1, 1970.