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Etowah High School is a public high school located in Woodstock, in the U.S. state of Georgia. It is one of seven high schools in the Cherokee County School District (CCSD), which includes Cherokee, Sequoyah, Woodstock, Creekview, River Ridge and I-Grad Virtual Academy. [7] Opening in 1976, Etowah's mascot is an Eagle, and its colors are blue ...
Etowah High School (Tennessee), United States Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about schools, colleges, or other educational institutions which are associated with the same title.
Etowah High School (EHS) is a public high school in Attalla, Alabama, United States. It is part of the Attalla City Schools district. In 1959 the school had 43 teachers for 1,266 students, a situation Mrs. Clark Mynatt of the Etowah News-Journal described as a "bad situation of overcrowding".
With two games remaining Etowah sits at 3-5 after a 49-0 drubbing by Cherokee County, on the cusp of one of the worst seasons in recent school history and could use some help to make the playoffs.
The Gaston, Glencoe, Sardis and West End bands pooled their efforts into the Etowah County Schools All-Star Band and took part in the 48 th annual Fantasy of Lights Christmas Parade on Dec. 1 in ...
Etowah High hired Scott Peavey to be their new football coach last Thursday, a Facebook post from the school announced. The school confirmed the move to the Gadsden Times on Tuesday.
It took about 15 years for high school integration to work its way throughout Tennessee. Cooke High School in Athens in McMinn County was one of the African-American schools that closed down as a result of integration. [13] The 1956 Tennessee educational census reported fewer than 100 school-age Negroes in McMinn. [8]
Etowah High School was a public high school in Etowah, Tennessee. It was a part of McMinn County Schools. It was built in 1925 and had two stories. [1] Circa 1951, when Kenneth Barker began his term as a principal, there were 320 students. [1] The number of students was 416, during the 1955–1956 school year. [2] By 1958 enrollment was up to 448.