Alvirne High School | |
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Address | |
200 Derry Road Hudson, New Hampshire United States |
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Information | |
Type | Secondary |
Established | 1950 |
School district | Hudson School District, NH SAU 81 |
Principal | Steven Beals |
Faculty | 160 |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1299 |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Maroon & Gold |
Mascot | Bronco |
Website | www |
Alvirne High School as viewed from the front lawn |
Coordinates: 42°47′37″N 71°26′19″W / 42.79361°N 71.43861°W Alvirne High School is located in the town of Hudson, New Hampshire, United States, with an enrollment of approximately 1,300 students from grades 9–12. Alvirne gets its name from a prominent Hudson family, the Alfred and Virginia Hills family, who left a large piece of property to the town in the early 20th century to provide land for the building of a high school. A contraction of their names (Alfred and Virginia) provides the name for the school. The school mascot is the bronco, and the school colors are maroon and gold.
Opened in 1992, the Wilbur H. Palmer Vocational - Technical Center, a career and technical education school, is housed on the same campus as Alvirne High School. Students from area high schools whose schools do not have CTE programs currently offered at the Wilber H. Palmer Center may apply for admission to the school. Students in the Wilber H. Palmer Center take their core academic classes as part of Alvirne High School, and take vocational courses at the Center.
The school was almost never built. A tract in the Hills' will providing for the school required that it open by a certain date. Behind schedule, the town held 4-H horticulture classes in the partially complete building to meet the literal deadline.
On September 8, 1974, a large fire gutted the building, requiring most of it to be rebuilt. The agricultural school was opened in the 1950s, and the modern vocational building opened in 1993. The large, 100-year-old Alvirne barn was heavily damaged by a fire in late March 1993, a year after the Palmer Vocational Center was opened.
The school's gymnasium is named after former principal Chester J. Steckevicz.