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Haines City High School

Haines City Senior High School
Haines City Crest.jpg
HCHS Campus Panorama.jpg
Location
2800 Hornet Drive
Haines City, FL 33844

United States
Information
Type Public
Established 1922
School board Polk County Public Schools
CEEB code 100620
Principal Adam Lane
Enrollment 2,083
Hours in school day 7 Hours
Color(s) Kelly Green, White, and Black               
Athletics Girls Weightlifting, Boys Weightlifting, Wrestling, Golf, Swimming, Cross Country, Tennis, Track & Field, Boys Soccer, Girls Soccer, Football. Baseball, Softball, Girls Volleyball, Boys Basketball, Girls Basketball
Athletics conference

FHSAA

  • Class 2A, District 10 (Girls Weightlifting)
  • Class 2A, District 12 (Boys Weightlifting)
  • Class 3A, District 5 (Wrestling)
  • Class 3A, District 9 (Golf)
  • Class 4A, District 4 (Swimming)
  • Class 4A, District 5 (Cross Country, Tennis, Track & Field)
  • Class 5A, District 9 (Boys Soccer, Girls Soccer)
  • Class 8A, District 7 (Football)
  • Class 9A, District 5 (Baseball, Softball)
  • Class 9A, District 7 (Girls Volleyball, Boys Basketball, Girls Basketball)
Mascot Hornets
Rivals Ridge Community High School, Lake Wales High School, Poinciana High school, Liberty High school
Information PHONE: (863) 421-3281
or (863) 421-3282
FAX: (863) 422-3283
Website
Last updated: 00:14, 1 May 2016 (UTC)

FHSAA

Haines City Senior High School (HCHS) is a public high school in Haines City, Florida. The school has existed in three separate locations.

Haines City Senior High School belongs to the Polk County School Board and is a member of Polk District Schools. Haines City High School was the original high school in the city, opening in 1922. During the 2005-2006 school year, there was a tuberculosis scare due to one of the students being diagnosed.

The first settlers arrived in Haines City in 1881. Two years later, they built the first school on East Hinson Avenue where the former City Hall building was located. The two-story wooden structure had a school enrollment of nine students. In 1918, a yellow brick elementary school for grades one through eight was built. Any student wishing a high school education had to attend classes in Lakeland, located 25 miles away from Haines City. Clay Cut was the original name of this quaint little town. In 1883, when trains would pass through this Central Florida area, they were lost from sight because of the railroad tracks that were built so deep in the clay. Later, when an officer with the South Florida Railroad named Colonel Henry Haines brought about the building of the town's train station, he was honored with the city being named after him. Thus, Haines City was born.

In 1916, the first citrus processing plant in the United States was built in Haines City and made the city all that it is today. The city lived and died with the successes and failures of this processing plant. The town experienced a mighty growth in population through these years until the mid-1890s. Haines City suffered immensely from severe freezes on the citrus crop and the city was almost destroyed by a fire. The citrus industry eventually recovered from the devastation, and in the 1920s, Haines City profited from a large population boost. As a result the community was incorporated, the city limits were expanded and many residential and commercial building were erected. Haines City has grown by leaps and bounds since then and has become a community to be proud of.

The first serving grades one through twelve was built in 1922-23 on Ledwith Avenue where the city tennis court facility is now located. A new school, called Central Elementary, was built in 1925-26 across the street, and it was here in 1926 that Haines City's first high school graduation ceremony took place. A new high school was built next to Central Elementary on Ledwith Avenue in 1949. It received national recognition in an architectural periodical for its innovative design. When it opened, it housed grade seven through twelve, but was later changed to grades ten through twelve and three additions were added to the school. With continued enrollment demands, the school was forced to seek a new location which could accommodate the rapidly growing area around the community.


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