Shelton High School (Washington)
Shelton High School is a senior high school located in Shelton, Washington. Shelton High School is a class 3-A high school and was restructured starting with the 2004–2005 school year to be a Grade 10-12 High School. More than 1000 students, grades 10–12, are enrolled at SHS. The high school is at capacity and needs to have additional space added before it can become a 9-12 high school again. If the February 14, 2017 bond passes a new addition to the high school and an auxiliary gym will be built. The school would then return to a 9-12 grade high school in the 2019–2020 school year with an anticipated 1433 students. Built in 1975, it replaced Irene S. Reed High School, Shelton's first high school.
Shelton High School | |
---|---|
Campus entrance as of Spring 2015 | |
Location | |
3737 Shelton Springs Rd Shelton, Washington United States | |
Information | |
Type | High School |
Established | 1975 |
School district | Shelton School District |
Principal | Jennifer Deyette |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 1,071 (2015-16)[1] |
Campus type | Urban |
Color(s) | Red and black |
Athletics | WIAA Class 3A, West Central District III |
Athletics conference | South Sound Conference http://www.sscathletics.org |
Mascot | Highclimber Hiram the Highclimber |
Rival | North Mason High School Capital High School |
Yearbook | Saghalie |
Website | www |
Sports
Shelton High School is a 3A-4A-division member of the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association. SHS offers a variety of sports.
The fall includes cross country, football, girls' soccer, boys' tennis, and girls' swimming.
The winter includes boys' basketball, girls' basketball, girls' bowling, boys' swimming, and wrestling.
Spring sports include baseball, fastpitch, golf, boys' soccer, girls' tennis, and track and field. Rugby is also another popular sport but it is not associated at the school.
On June 26, 2018, the Shelton School Board unanimously voted to name the football/soccer field after longtime head football coach, Jack Stark.[2] Coach Stark walked the Climber sidelines for 25 years, leading the Climbers to state championships in 1974 and 1985. Jack Stark Field at Highclimber Stadium will be dedicated on August 31, 2018, when the Climbers host the North Mason Bulldogs in the annual, Mason County Cup.
State Championships | |||
---|---|---|---|
Season | Sport | Number of Championships | Year |
Fall | Football | 2 | 1974, 1985 |
Winter | Basketball, boys' | 1 | 1976 |
Bowling, girls' | 1 | 2007 | |
Spring | Slowpitch Softball, Girls' | 1 | 1989 |
Total | 5 | ||
State Championships: Football - 1975, 1985 Boys' Basketball - 1977
SHS Marching Band:
Yakima Sweepstakes Winners - 2008
Fight Song
Go Shelton Climbers, Upward we will climb
With our colors flying
We will cheer you all the time
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Go Shelton Climbers, Fight for SHS
Fight for the fame of our fair name
As Shelton Climbers win this game
Go Climbers Go!
Go Climbers Go!
Go Go Go Climbers Go!
S-H-E-L-T-O-N
Go Shelton Climbers, Fight for SHS
Fight for the fame of our fair name
As Shelton Climbers win this game
Shelton Invite
The Shelton Invite is an annual track and field invitational meet held at Highclimber Stadium. Created in 1960, it is the longest running track invitational in the nation. It was formed when the Centralia Relays meet (1930's to 1950's) ceased to exist, leaving the Western Washington region with no multi-team meets. Multi-team meets are created so coaches can challenge their top athletes with other top athletes from different schools. It was Aberdeen High School who won four of the first five Shelton Invites. As the years went by, the invite saw up to 30 schools signed up per year. Sixteen years later, Shelton was seeing over 50 schools per year. By the 1980s, multi-meets became more and more popular and started taking its toll on Shelton's entry list. In 1999, the Shelton Invite organizer's began an effort to regain the meets status that it once had. The "new" Shelton Invite gathers the top sixteen athletes in Washington State high schools for each event. 2013 had a record number of 62 teams enter with their best athletes. The Shelton invite is considered Washington's #1 Elite track and field meet and one of the hardest to qualify for.[3]
Pool closure
The school district has been struggling with balancing funds available and increasing needs of the student population. On February 10, 2015 the school board voted to not close the pool because unfunded basic education needs and deferred maintenance for other facilities could not be fully funded. Deferred maintenance for the district is estimated to be more than $3 million. Based on the recommendation of the superintendent, the school board agreed that the swimming pool was a community asset and should not be funded by the school district alone. The school board voted 4-1 that the pool be shut down on July 1, 2015. The pool is home to the Shelton Swim Teams and where third graders receive water safety training. While agreements are not finalized, most likely the swim teams will practice and compete at The Evergreen State College Aquatic Center located about 25 miles from Shelton or the Squaxin Island Tribal Aquatic Center about seven miles from the Shelton High School. Using the ORB study conducted in March 2014 the superintended stated that the pool is in need of $2.5 million in repairs which is an amount the school district simply cannot afford. Repurposing of the closed pool facility has not been finalized as of March 25, 2015.[4] On May 30, 2015, Mason General Hospital made a joint operation to keep the pool funded and open.
Notable alumni
- Raul Allegre, Former NFL placekicker (New York Giants)
- Wes Stock, Former MLB player (Baltimore Orioles, Kansas City Athletics)
- Caleb Schlauderaff, NFL player (Green Bay Packers, New York Jets)
- Douglas Long, Former NFL player (Seattle Seahawks
References
- "Shelton High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved December 10, 2018.
- http://masonwebtv.com/archives/31068
- "Shelton Invite history". Shelton Invite committee.
- "Pool Recommendations" (PDF). Shelton School District.