George C. Marshall High School is a public school in Falls Church, Virginia. Named for General George C. Marshall, it opened in 1962 and is part of Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS). It is ranked #245 in the nation for public schools and has received a gold award for Best High Schools from the U.S. News & World Report 2020.[5] It is ranked 4th in Virginia and 4th in Fairfax County. George C. Marshall High School is a fully accredited high school based on Virginia's Standards of Learning tests.[6]
Curriculum
Most Marshall students passed the end-of-year exams during the 2017-2018 school year. The graduation rate was 96%.[7]
Subject
Accreditation Pass Rate
English
97%
History
96%
Mathematics
93%
Science
95%
Admissions
Below are the demographics as presented during the 2019- 2020 school year at Marshall High School:[8][9]
Gender
Marshall Percentage
FCPS High School Average
Male
52.67%
52.0%
Female
47.33%
48.0%
Ethnicity
Marshall Percentage
FCPS High School Average
American Indian / Alaska Native
0.3%
0.3%
Asian
20.37%
19.49%
Black/ African American
5.62%
9.8%
Hispanic/ Latino
20.32%
27%
Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander
0.1%
0.12%
Two or More Races
5.9%
4.7%
White
47.19%
37.85%
19.80%, or 423 students, were eligible for free or reduced lunch in the 2019- 2020 school year.[10]
Extracurricular activities
Marshall High School has over 30 extracurricular activities available for its students and over ten honor societies available for high-achieving students.[11]
Marshall has a growing orchestra, band, choir, and theater program. They participate in numerous competitions annually, such as the District Performance Assessment and the Music Heritage Festival.
Athletics
Marshall's teams are nicknamed the Statesmen, their mascot is the griffin (a half lion, half eagle creature), and their teams play in the AAA Liberty District and Northern Region of the Virginia High School League. While Marshall's enrollment had been at the AA level, and the school had needed to petition to play in AAA to the VHSL to maintain rivalries with local schools, the school's enrollment had increased to over 1900 students by the fall of 2014.
In the 2005-2006 school year, the field hockey team and the boys' basketball teams advanced to the AAA tournaments.
Marshall girls' basketball won the Liberty District tournament in 2006 and 2007. The girls' tennis team placed first in the Liberty District in 2009 and second (to Thomas Jefferson) at the regional tournament.
George C Marshall High School's new school motto, "Small School Big Heart", was started during what is called the Cinderella season on the 05-06 Varsity Men's Basketball, who advanced to the semi-finals of the state tournament.[citation needed]
In 2013, the Men's Varsity Basketball team won the Liberty District. In 2014, the Men's Varsity Football team broke a losing streak stretching back to 2011 with victories over Thomas Jefferson and JEB Stuart.
In 2016, the Varsity Cheerleading team won the Capitol Conference for the first time in VHSL history. The team also advanced to the 5A Regionals, which hadn't been done since 2013. In 2017, the team placed 2nd in the conference and 8th in 6A Regionals. In 2018, the team placed 1st in the conference and 6th in the 6A Regionals.
In 2016, the girls' cross country team won the 5A State Championships at the Great Meadows course in The Plains, Virginia. The team had five members in the top 20. Placing 1st, 9th, 15th, 16th, and 18th. The overall team score was 53 points, 54 points ahead of second place Tuscarora High School (Virginia).
State team championships and runner-up finishes
Marshall has four team state championship titles, which are:
Marshall also gained several individual state champions in Track and Field, Cross Country, and Tennis during the 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017 seasons.
Orchestra
The Marshall Orchestra Program consists of four orchestras: The Marshall Concert Orchestra, Symphonic Orchestra, Philharmonic Orchestra, and Statesmen Sinfonia. During the 2014-2015 school year, it has grown to include more than 120 members. The first three orchestras have received superior ratings at the District Performance Assessment for the past three years. They have also received a gold rating and an adjudicator's award for their performance during the 2011 Music Heritage Festival. Statesmen Sinfonia is a new ensemble introduced in the 2014-2015 school year due to the growing number of members.[16]
Band
The Marshall Band Program is composed of two subgroups: Concert Band[17] and Wind Symphony.[18] The band program is currently being led by director Paul Vesilind, who was named George C. Marshall High School Teacher of the Year in Spring 2015.[19] The Marshall Band has held the Honor Band[20] title for three years consecutively.
Marshall has many extracurricular bands, including Marshall's "Marching Statesmen[21]", which have come in 1st place at multiple competitions. They went to the marching band state competition for the first time in October 2015. There is also a Marshall Jazz Band,[22] which performs at school and community events. The band offerings at Marshall[23] also include indoor drumline, percussion ensemble, flute choir, and IB music. The percussion ensemble has also been recognized for its achievement. They were invited to the Indianapolis Music for All National Percussion Festival in March 2009. The event is part of the Bands of America National Convert Festival. The John Philip Sousa Foundation awarded the Marshall Band the Sudler Flag of Honor in 1994.
Marshall High School is also home to an award-winning theater program, which won the District level competition nine years running, and won the championship at the AAA State Finals of the Virginia High School League One-Act Festival five times (2000, 2001, 2003, 2005,[24] 2007), which is the record for most wins among all Virginia high schools. Furthermore, the department is known for allowing students to perform shows with more adult themes, such as uncensored versions of Company and Chicago.
Cyber Patriot
The Cyber Patriot Program is sponsored by the Air Force Association. Competitors are given virtual machines with vulnerabilities in them. In the allotted amount of time, they must correctly identify and rectify all vulnerabilities, usually viruses, while maintaining critical services.[25] At the national finals, the competitors also have to complete networking and digital forensics challenges.
Marshall started its Cyber Patriot Program during the 2011-2012 school year. A non-affiliated company, Terrawi, provided most of the resources and training materials to help adequately prepare the teams for competition. The original two teams, which consisted of twelve members, placed 7th in the nation during the final round of competition.[26]
Of the original three teams, the Marshall Cyber Patriot Program sent two teams to the Cyber Patriot National Finals, held on March 15, 2013, at the Gaylord Hotel in Maryland. Both teams finished in the top 3 of the open division, along with their state rival, Chantilly High School, which placed top in the nation. Following the competition, the team is expected to compete in several competitions against other schools. Several other high schools in Fairfax County have asked the Marshall Cyber Patriot Program to help start up Cyber Patriot Programs.
[27]
Marshall High School started its Future Problem Solving Club in 2012-2013.[28] During its first year, the club consisted of four members who competed as a single team. The team passed through the Regional Competition, being one of two teams to represent Fairfax County at the State Bowl. At the state bowl, the Marshall team was a finalist in the middle division and received first place in the action plan presentation for their humorous portrayal of Romeo and Juliet.[29]
Marshall High School has a growing Model United Nations club, which has grown to include more than 100 members during the 2016-17 school year. The club competes in notable tournaments annually, such as VAMUN, William and Mary MUN, and HenMUN. Marshall High School organizes My First MUN every September to prepare new MUN delegates for future MUN conferences.[30] Marshall held the first CIMUNE conference in January 2015, a Model UN conference completely in Spanish.[31]
Notable alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(December 2020)
Nick Sorensen (1996): Played safety for the St. Louis Rams, Jacksonville Jaguars, and the Cleveland Browns in the NFL. Sorensen now is currently the Defensive Coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers.
Kathrine Switzer (1964): Pioneer female distance runner; first woman to run the Boston Marathon (1967) with an official race number
Joe Swarm (1989): Played College Football at Virginia Tech, currently the school's Director of Student Activities
Controversies
Gang violence
On February 27, 1998, at 12:20 pm, David Albrecht, a 17-year-old Pimmit Hills Alternative High School student, drove his Chevrolet Monte Carlo into Marshall's rear parking lot. With him in the car was a former student who had recently quit school. Right behind him was a dark-colored sports utility vehicle. The SUV pulled up alongside David's Monte Carlo, and the driver pulled out a .22-caliber rifle. Two to three shots were fired before the SUV left the parking lot. David, 17, was struck in the head and died from his wounds. His passenger, an 18-year-old, had escaped injury by ducking down. Police later confirmed that members of the Tiny Rascal Gang Asian youth gang did this shooting.[36][37]
Discrimination case
During the 2011-2012 School Year at George C. Marshall High School, a dispute occurred between an English teacher and a black student. The teacher asked an African American student to read a Langston Hughes poem in a "blacker" way. Marshall administrators immediately launched an investigation into the alleged incident.[38][39]
In the movie Remember the Titans (2000), the climax of the film comes at the end of the 1971 AAA state championship football game between T.C. Williams High School and George Marshall High School. The movie was dramatized from a Washington Post series about race relations in the high school football fishbowl of 1971, as the Hollywood underdog T.C. Williams Titans took on the powerful Marshall Statesmen (coached by Ed Henry). The most notable dramatic license taken in the movie was to convert what was a regular-season matchup between Marshall and T.C. Williams into a made-for-Hollywood state championship. In reality, the Marshall game was the most challenging game T.C. Williams played all year, and the actual state championship (against Andrew Lewis High School of the Roanoke Valley) was a 27-0 blowout. The Titans won the Marshall game on a fourth down come-from-behind play at the end of the game. In addition to the added drama of the Marshall game, there were legal issues concerning using Andrew Lewis High School's name in the movie.
Ignored in both the original newspaper articles and the movie is the fact that in 1971, the city of Alexandria consolidated three four-year high schools into a single two-year school, with only juniors and seniors.[40] As a result, the best of the varsity football squads at George Washington High School (converted to a middle school), Hammond High School (converted to a middle school) and T.C Williams High School united in what amounted to an all-city, all-star team at T.C. Williams.
The legendary Ed Henry was the head coach at Marshall for six seasons, from 1969 to 1974, and is portrayed in the movie. In 1997, the Virginia High School League Hall of Fame inducted Henry.
^Waddell, Nick. "Mike Brown". Society for American Baseball Research. Cronkite School at ASU. Archived from the original on December 7, 2022. Retrieved February 19, 2023.