The school was named for Antonio Maceo Smith (1903–1977), a pioneer civil rights leader in Dallas.
History
Originally located in the Nolan Estes Educational Plaza, A. Maceo Smith HS was moved in 1989 due to complaints about the unsuitability of the physical plant at the plaza, a former shopping center.[1] After the school moved, the attendance boundaries between Smith and South Oak Cliff High School shifted, with students zoned to Stone Middle School and Zumwalt Middle School, except for students also zoned to Bushman Elementary, moving from SOC to Smith, and students zoned to Storey Middle School, except for those who began their educations at Marshall and Oliver elementaries, would be zoned to SOC.[2]
After the closing of the Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District, Smith took in students from the former school district boundary and continued to serve former WHISD areas until its repurposing.[3][4]
For several years, A. Maceo Smith was a Texas Education Agency "unacceptable" ranked school.[5] In 2011 the district converted A. Maceo Smith into a technology magnet, A. Maceo Smith New Tech High School.[6] The majority of students in its attendance zone were reassigned to Wilmer-Hutchins High School,[4][7] and the previous Smith football team mostly became the new Wilmer-Hutchins team.[8] Some areas of the former Smith zone were reassigned to South Oak Cliff.[9] Since Smith was reconstituted as a magnet school, it avoided the possibility of the TEA reconstituting or closing the school itself due to its poor performance as a zoned school.[5]
Sarah Zumwalt Middle School temporarily shared the Smith building with New Tech while the permanent Zumwalt campus was being fixed. Barack Obama Male Leadership Academy, previously at the B.F. Darrell campus, began occupying the former Smith campus in 2018, while New Tech moved to B.F. Darrell.[10]
The school made the news around the world in 2002 when alligators, poisonoussnakes, bobcats, coyotes, and other dangerous animals took over the practice football field after beavers dammed a nearby waterway during the summer.[13][14]
On May 25, 2007, the Dallas school board voted 6–0 to uphold the firing of Smith principal Dwain Govan over spending on his DISD credit card, in an investigation that indicated 93 district employees had made questionable purchases or in other ways had abused the program. As of the board's vote — from which one board member abstained out of concerns the card's rules had been ill-defined — Govan had yet to account for purchases that included two sets of gold-plated flatware, four portable DVD players, four digital cameras, a flat-screen TV, a printer, $8,747 in Wal-Martgift cards and approximately $4,650 in restaurant gift cards. A Texas Education Agency hearing examiner recommended upholding the proposal for Govan's termination, but noted that there had been no accusation or evidence that he took district property for his personal use.[15]
Around March 2008, while Dallas ISD prepared for a bond election, some parents felt concern that the district may move the students at Smith to a school in the area formerly controlled by Wilmer-Hutchins ISD.[16]
^Dent, Mark. "Wilmer-Hutchins ready for first football season since 2004" (Partial archive). The Dallas Morning News. August 15, 2011. Also as "Revival of the Hutch", August 16, 2011 - Available from Pressreader.com. Retrieved on October 18, 2018. Quotes: "Closed since 2005 after the district became insolvent, Wilmer-Hutchins has reopened, taking the bulk of A. Maceo Smith's student body." and "Two years ago, they started hearing the rumor of A. Maceo Smith's impending closure,[...]they knew the majority of their core would be back for this year playing the same game[...]call themselves the Eagles rather than the Falcons.[...]"
This list is incomplete. Italicized public schools are not in the "full purpose" Dallas city limits but have portions of Dallas in their attendance boundaries.