Walnut Hills High School
Public, coeducational high school in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Walnut Hills High School is a public college-preparatory high school in Cincinnati, Ohio . Operated by Cincinnati Public Schools , it houses grades seven through twelve. The school was established in 1895 and has occupied its current building since 1932.
History
The school was the third district public high school established in the city of Cincinnati, following Hughes H.S. and Woodward H.S., and was opened in September 1895 on the corner of Ashland and Burdett Avenues in Cincinnati. As a district high school, it accommodated the conventional four years (grades 9–12).[citation needed ]
A new building on Victory Boulevard (now Victory Parkway) was built on 14 acres (57,000 m2 ) acquired from the Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati and completed in 1931. Designed by architect Frederick W. Garber 's firm, it remains in use today. The facility was designed for 1700 students and included 31 class rooms, 3 study halls, choral harmony and band rooms, a general shop, a print shop, a mechanical drawing room, 2 swimming pools (separate swimming for boys and girls), a library, a large and a small auditorium, and a kitchen for teaching cooking (with pantry and adjacent living room and dining room).[ 8]
Four temporary, prefabricated steel classrooms were installed in 1958 to accommodate the increasing student population.[ 9]
Clubs and activities
Walnut Hills' Latin Club functions as a local chapter of both the Ohio Junior Classical League (OJCL)[ 10] and National Junior Classical League (NJCL).[ 11]
Notable alumni
Darren Anderson (1987) professional football player (NFL 1992–1998)
Stan Aronoff (1950), politician and longtime member of the Ohio Senate
Helen Elsie Austin (1924), attorney, US Foreign Service Officer, first black female graduate of UC Law School, first black woman to serve as Assistant Attorney General of Ohio
Theda Bara (Theodosia Goodman 1903), early movie star of the silent screen
Janet Biehl (1971), author and graphic novelist
Caroline Black (botanist) (1887–1930)
Jowon Briggs (2019) professional football player for the Cleveland Browns [ 12]
Ric Bucher (1979), NBA correspondent, author and radio presenter
Elisabeth Bumiller (1974), The New York Times White House correspondent
Nina Castagna , Olympic rower
Stanley M. Chesley (1954), attorney who won Bhopal, MGM Grand, and Beverly Hills Supper Club fire class action settlements
Michael L. Chyet (1975), linguist
Carl W. Condit (1932), historian of urban and architectural history
Douglas S. Cramer (1949), TV and Broadway producer, art collector, co-founder and board member of Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles , board member Museum of Modern Art, New York .
Naomi Deutsch (1908), public health nursing administrator, author
Jim Dine (1953), pop artist
Michael Dine (1971), theoretical physicist
Alan Dressler (1966), astronomer and astrophysicist
Elizabeth Brenner Drew (1953), political journalist, author and lecturer
Isadore Epstein (1937), astronomer
Frank Benjamin Foster, III (1946) saxophonist, composer, member of Count Basie Orchestra
Paula Froelich , Columnist Page Six of the New York Post
Helen Iglauer Glueck (1925), physician and hematology researcher
Dick Gordon , professional football player 1965–1974 for Chicago, Green Bay, Los Angeles, San Diego
Bill Gradison , Mayor of Cincinnati (1945)[ 13] [ 14]
Marcel Groen (1963), attorney and Chairman of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party
Charles Guggenheim (1942), four-time Academy Award winner for documentaries
Richard S. Hamilton , geometer who discovered the Ricci flow (and applied it to the Poincaré conjecture ), winner of the Veblen and Shaw Prizes[ 15]
Fred Hersch , jazz composer and musician, Grammy Award nominee
Charles R. Hook, Sr. (1898), American industrialist, former president of Armco Steel Corp
Ronald Howes , toy inventor; invented the Easy-Bake Oven
DeHart Hubbard (1921), first African-American to win an individual gold medal in the Olympics (long jump – 1924 Paris Summer Games)
Miller Huggins (1897), managed Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees , inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1964
Rick Hughes (1991), professional basketball player in European leagues
Fred Karpoff (1981) pianist[ 16]
Kenneth Koch (1947), poet of the New York School , dramatist and educator
Walter Laufer , Olympic gold medalist[ 17]
James Levine (1961), pianist, conductor, musical director of the Metropolitan Opera and the Boston Symphony Orchestra
Steven Levinson (1964), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Hawaii from 1992 to 2008
Sabina Magliocco (1977), professor of Anthropology and Religion at the University of British Columbia
Jonathan Meyer (1982), lawyer and general counsel of the United States Department of Homeland Security [ 18]
Alexis Nikole Nelson , forager and internet personality
Stanley B. Prusiner (1960), 1997 Nobel Prize for medicine
Carl West Rich (1916), attorney, Hamilton County prosecutor, city councilman and three-term mayor of Cincinnati, US Congressman
Lois Rosenthal , author, publisher, arts & humanities philanthropist.
Jerry Rubin (1956), 1960s-era radical and later a social activist
Stephen Sanger (1964), chairman and CEO of General Mills
Robert Shmalo (1996), international ice dancing competitor
Itaal Shur (1985), Grammy Award winner (2000)
Lee Smolin (1972), theoretical physicist
Donald Andrew Spencer Sr. (1932), first African American trustee of Ohio University
Rick Steiner (1964), stockbroker, professional poker player, five-time Tony Award -winning Broadway producer
Mary Lee Tate , (c. 1907), painter[ 19]
MaCio Teague (2015), basketball player, member of the NCAA Champion 2020–21 Baylor Bears basketball team
Jane Timken (1985), attorney
Tony Trabert (1948), tennis star of the 1950s, won 1955 French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open
Jean Trounstine (1965), author, actress, activist on prison issues
Jonathan Valin (1965), mystery series novelist
Evelyn Venable (1930), Hollywood actress with star on Hollywood Walk of Fame ; professor of ancient Greek and Latin at UCLA
Richard Weber , emeritus professor on the Faculty of Mathematics, University of Cambridge
Worth Hamilton Weller (1931), herpetologist
Mary Wineberg (1998), track and field Olympian, gold medalist in the women's 4 × 400 m relay at the 2008 Beijing Olympics
References
^ a b c "Walnut Hills High School" . National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved December 10, 2024 .
^ OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association member directory" . Retrieved 2010-03-16 .
^ "Walnut Hills High School (Top 100, #36)" . U.S. News & World Report. December 4, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-05 .
^ NCA-CASI. "NCA-Council on Accreditation and School Improvement" . Archived from the original on March 15, 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-16 .
^ Hannah Sparling. "Walnut Hills names interim principal" . Retrieved 2017-11-24 .
^ "Walnut Hills High School" . Retrieved 2021-04-29 .
^ "Superintendent - Cincinnati Public Schools" . www.cps-k12.org . Retrieved 2024-08-10 .
^ Visiting Committee Report Walnut Hills High School by the Cincinnati School Foundation, page 4, April 1969
^ Visiting Committee Report Walnut Hills High School by the Cincinnati School Foundation, Appendix A, page 48, April 1969
^ "2009 Convention – Club Point Summary" (PDF) . Ohio Junior Classical League. 2009. Retrieved 10 August 2009 .
^ "Constitution of the Ohio Junior Classical League" (PDF) . Ohio Junior Classical League. March 2008. Retrieved 18 September 2009 . ...by paying both OJCL annual chapter dues and any annual chapter membership dues required by NJCL.
^ "Jowon Briggs" . Cincinnati Bearcats .
^ The Remembrancer (yearbook) 1945
^ McDonald, Jack (October 20, 1965). "Gradison Guides Urban Renewal" . The Cincinnati Enquirer . p. 15 – via Newspapers.com.
^ "Autobiography of Richard S Hamilton" . The Shaw Prize Foundation. 2011-09-28.
^ "Alumni Foundation Records Jan. 1 – Dec. 31, 2014" (PDF) . Walnut Hills High School Alumni Foundation . Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
^ Suess, Jeff (August 6, 2016). "How Local Olympians Made Their Marks" . Cincinnati.com .
^ Wartman, Scott. "Biden nominates Cincinnati native as top Department of Homeland Security official" . The Enquirer . Retrieved 2022-03-30 .
^ "The Cincinnatian [1911]" . Cincinnati and Hamilton Public Library . 1911. Retrieved 2024-04-16 .
External links
International National Geographic