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Havelock High School is a public high school located in Havelock, North Carolina, founded in 1956. Havelock is one of three high schools operated by the Craven County School District . The original campus is now the site of Havelock Middle School, and the current campus was built in 1971, although it has been expanded several times since.
Havelock is the name of several schools: In England Havelock School in Grimsby; In Canada: Havelock Elementary School in New Brunswick; In New Zealand: Havelock School, New Zealand in Havelock, Marlborough; Havelock North Primary School, Havelock North Intermediate and Havelock North High School in Havelock North.
A school auditorium was built in 1985, and received weatherproofing upgrades in 2021. [4] In 2020 the school announced plans for a new auditorium. [5] In September 2023 the school sought additional funding for the build as a result of costs increases due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [4] In 2023, Joel Wilton took over as principal of the school.
The Eagles have developed a longtime rivalry with New Bern High School, a 4-A high school located just 12 miles away from WCHS. The Eagles biggest rival, however, would be conference and cross county foe, Havelock High School. The Eagles play their home football games in the on-campus stadium named for longtime head coach Clay Jordan.
Havelock is one of eight cities in the world named after Sir Henry Havelock, a British officer in India, who distinguished himself in 1857 during what was known as the Indian Mutiny. The area was originally named "Havelock Station" in the late 1850s, when the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad built a depot where its right-of-way crossed what ...
Iona College is a state-integrated girls' school in the Hawke's Bay area of New Zealand's North Island. Founded in 1914 by the Presbyterian Church, it was intended to provide boarding facilities for girls from rural communities. Today, the college has a capped roll of 330 New Zealand and international students – 170 boarders and 160 day girls.
As a result, Laurens–Marathon sent its high school students to Pocahontas Area High School. [8] The current secondary building was built in the decade of the 2010s and is meant to be handicap accessible. The original secondary building was built in 1921 and was scheduled to be razed after the new building was complete. [6]
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