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Each school chooses to compete in Division I or Division II. Division I schools are schools which generally allow students to attend without payment of tuition, i.e., public schools, except that tuition may be charged to a student who is a resident of the county in which a school is located but outside of a city school district or special school district, in which case the tuition is the ...
Franklin's original mascot from the school's opening in 1910 was a 6-headed Dragon. In 1937, the mascot was changed to a confederate "rebel" soldier. [14] According to former principal Willie Dickerson, the 1937 annual described the reason for the new mascot at the then-segregated, all-white school saying "there was no animosity of the past ... we uphold these ideals and believe them to be right."
Since 2018, the school competes in the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association in Class 5A for football, Class AAA for baseball, basketball, softball, and volleyball, and the large division for remaining sports. [40] The school competes in the following TSSAA-sanctioned sports, and has won nine state championships, three in soccer and ...
Karrah Ellis will be the new Franklin High School athletic director, pictured at Dean Park in Shrewsbury, April 21, 2022. ... "To give attention to an area or a segment of our population that also ...
Franklin Special School District (FSSD) is a school district in Franklin, Tennessee, United States. The district includes 3,850 students attending eight schools for grades K–8. After completing eighth grade, students attend a Williamson County Schools high school (Franklin and Centennial). [1] The boundary includes the majority of Franklin. [2]
These sports include: football, tennis, volleyball, soccer, track (Boys & Girls), and wrestling. Students pay a $25 fee (2010) to participate in these cooperative sports. Additionally, the marching band program is in cooperation with Valley Grove School District. Franklin Area High School has won two state basketball championships.
Fort Campbell High School, Fort Campbell. The Fort Campbell Army base straddles the Kentucky-Tennessee border. The school is physically located in Tennessee, but is not a member of the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, the state's governing body for interscholastic activities.
Seven Stark County-area high school athletes are are among the Northeast District Athletic Board's 44 recipients of scholar athlete awards. Jackson's Divya Shanmugam and Kailey Zagst, GlenOak's ...