Burnsville Senior High School | |
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Address | |
600 E. Highway 13 Burnsville MN Burnsville, Minnesota 55337 United States |
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Coordinates | 44°47′05″N 93°15′57″W / 44.78472°N 93.26583°WCoordinates: 44°47′05″N 93°15′57″W / 44.78472°N 93.26583°W |
Information | |
School type | Taxes/alumni, Public high school |
Established | 1957 |
School district | Burnsville-Eagan-Savage Independent School District 191 |
Superintendent | Joe Gothard |
School code | ISD 191 |
Principal | Dave Helke |
Grades | 9 – 12 |
Gender | Co-ed |
Age range | 14-19 |
Number of students | ~2500 |
Hours in school day | 6.6 |
Color(s) | Black and gold |
Athletics conference | South Suburban Conference |
Sports | Football, basketball, baseball, hockey |
Mascot | Sparky |
Team name | Blaze |
Rival | Eagan High School, Lakeville North High School, Lakeville South High School, Apple Valley High School, Prior Lake High School, Eastview High School |
Newspaper | The Voice (online) |
Yearbook | The Blaze |
Tuition | Free |
Communities served | Burnsville, Savage, Eagan, Shakopee, Apple Valley |
Website | www |
Burnsville High School (BHS) is a four-year public high school located in Burnsville, Minnesota, United States. Burnsville is a southern suburb about 25 minutes outside of St. Paul. The school is part of Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District 191, which covers most of Burnsville, as well as parts of the surrounding cities Savage and Eagan, and small parts of Shakopee and Apple Valley. A majority of the incoming freshmen come from Eagle Ridge, Metcalf, or Nicollet Middle Schools. The school mascot is Sparky, a humanoid with a fireball for a head. Burnsville High School athletics are a part of the South Suburban Conference.
Burnsville High School originally opened in 1957 as a K-12 school with an initial enrollment of about 400 students. In 1966, upon completion of the newly constructed school, students in grades seven through nine started attending Metcalf Junior High. Today, students attending Burnsville's Metcalf, Eagle Ridge and Nicollet Middle Schools will attend Burnsville Senior High School for grades 9-12.
On April 25, 1994, the largest high school arson in the United States occurred, which resulted in over $15 million in damages. The same arsonist also started fires at Edina High School and Minnetonka High School. During the restoration, high school students studied at nearby Nicollet Junior High and Sky Oaks Elementary Schools. Around the time of the fire, the school's mascot was changed from the Braves to the Blaze to avoid stigmatizing and stereotyping Native Americans. The name "Blaze" was conceived because of the word "Burnsville" in the school name, and had nothing to do with the fire; it was merely a coincidence. The Braves icon is still widely accepted, and many students still have Braves apparel. Prior to the Braves, the first mascot of Burnsville High School was the Bulldogs.
In September, 2012, the BHS school board started looking towards Burnsville High School becoming a grades nine-twelve school. If this were done, they would have to add on a new portion of the school. The proposed 40,000-square-foot building addition was estimated at $12 million. Randy Clegg (former superintendent of District 191) also recommended closing the Burnsville High School Senior Campus in 2014 and holding all senior classes at the main campus.