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Hinsdale Central High School

Hinsdale Central High School
Hinsdale Central logo.png
Address
5500 South Grant Street
Hinsdale, Illinois 60521
United States
Coordinates 41°47′14″N 87°56′00″W / 41.7872°N 87.9332°W / 41.7872; -87.9332Coordinates: 41°47′14″N 87°56′00″W / 41.7872°N 87.9332°W / 41.7872; -87.9332
Information
School type public secondary
Opened 1879
School district Hinsdale Township High School District 86
Superintendent Bruce Law
Principal William Walsh
Teaching staff 276.93 (FTE)
Grades 912
Gender coed
Enrollment 2828 (2012-2013)
Student to teacher ratio 10.21
Campus suburban
School color(s)      Red
     White
Athletics conference West Suburban Conference
Nickname Red Devils
Publication Solstice
Newspaper Devils' Advocate
Yearbook El Diablo
Website

Hinsdale Central High School, or HCHS (locally referred to as simply "Central") is a public four-year high school located at the corner of W. 55th St. and S. Grant St. in Hinsdale, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Founded in 1879, the school is well known for its large spending per student, academic excellence, and athletic programs. It is part of Hinsdale Township High School District No. 86, which also includes Hinsdale South High School. The school is 17 miles west of Chicago and serves a suburban residential area of approximately 35,000 people. The Central campus draws its students from all of the village of Hinsdale, majority of Clarendon Hills and Oak Brook, and small parts of Burr Ridge, Darien, Willowbrook and Westmont.

The official name of the school is Hinsdale Township High School Central, often abbreviated Hinsdale TWP HS Central. This name is derived from the school's original name: Hinsdale Township High School (HTHS). "Central" was added to the original name when Hinsdale South High School opened in 1965.

Hinsdale High School was established in 1879 when community members began to see the need for education beyond eighth grade for their children. The first students, Alice Warren, Minnie Hinds, Grace Redfield, and Florence Webster graduated in 1883. In this period, there were five teachers, including the principal, teaching about 120 students in grades 1 - 12. All twelve grades shared the ca. 1866 schoolhouse at Garfield and Third Streets, built by William Robbins to serve the community he was developing.


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