*** Welcome to piglix ***

Exeter High School (New Hampshire)

Exeter High School
Exeter High School (NH) Logo.png
Address
1 Blue Hawk Dr.
Exeter, New Hampshire
United States
Information
Type Public
Established September 9, 1912
Principal Michael Monahan (acting)
Faculty 204
Grades High school (9-12)
Enrollment 1704
Campus Suburban
Color(s) Silver and Navy         
Mascot The Blue Hawk
Newspaper The Talon
Website

Coordinates: 43°01′00″N 71°00′02″W / 43.01677°N 71.00042°W / 43.01677; -71.00042

Exeter High School is a public high school in Exeter, New Hampshire, in the United States. It serves students in grades 9 through 12 who reside in the towns of Exeter, Stratham, Kensington, Newfields, Brentwood, and East Kingston, New Hampshire.

The Exeter Area Public School was established in 1848 as a co-educational institution and became a school for boys twenty years later when Robinson Female Seminary was founded. The school was originally located on Court Street until 1912 when it was moved to Linden Street and changed to Exeter High School. The new school opened September 9, 1912, and most of the town stores declared a half-holiday for the occasion. The school was nicknamed "Tuck High School", thanks mainly to a gift of $5,000 by philanthropist Edward Tuck.

The "Pinnacle" yearbook was first produced in 1949 as a joint effort by Exeter High School and Robinson Female Seminary. On April 7, 1954, an affirmative vote of a $760,000 bond was passed to construct a new coed Exeter High School and elementary school; the school opened in September 1956.

After years of a growing population and structural problems experienced in the old building, it was determined that a new 227,000-square-foot (21,100 m2) building would be built. The new Exeter High School opened on the outskirts of town, at 1 Blue Hawk Drive, on New Hampshire Route 27 in September 2006. The original Tuck School/Exeter High School was renovated into the Seacoast School of Technology, and an annex building (formerly Exeter Area Junior High School) was razed to make way for a new YMCA facility.


...
Wikipedia

...