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Ipswich High School is a four-year public high school in Ipswich, Massachusetts, United States. It has an enrollment of approximately 500 students (as of 2024). [3] It is the only high school in the town of Ipswich. Ipswich High School shares a building with Ipswich Middle School.
The high school football team won the Division 3A Super Bowl Championship in 2006. It was the school's first title since 1992, and the fifth in school history. (Previous titles were achieved in 1974, 1977, 1991, and 1992.) Ipswich's traditional rival is Hamilton-Wenham Regional High School. The Ipswich Volleyball Team has won the Division IV ...
Marblehead Community Public School District (CC, Marblehead, 4–8, serving the Marblehead school district) Martha's Vineyard Public School District (CC, West Tisbury, K–12, serving the Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard, Oak Bluffs, Tisbury and Up-Island Regional school districts)
Get the Ipswich, MA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
The district boundaries extend from the junction of South Main and Elm Streets, southward past the green to where County Road (Massachusetts Route 1A) crosses Saltonstall's Creek. [2] Ipswich voted to establish the South Green in 1686, after which it was used as a common grazing area, and as a training ground for the local militia.
In September 1951, the new school formally opened with mostly new teaching staff under headmaster J. S. H. Smitherman. [1] It became comprehensive in 1977, under the auspices of the Inner London Education Authority. The school closed in 1990 and the site was sold to the Girls' Day School Trust. In 1992 it became the home of Ipswich High School.
Georgetown High School, Georgetown; Gloucester High School, Gloucester; Ipswich High School, Ipswich; Lynnfield High School, Lynnfield; Manchester-Essex Regional Junior-Senior High School, Manchester-by-the-Sea
Some of the more interesting houses include that of John Caldwell, built c. 1660 on the site of Governor Simon Bradstreet's original 1630s house, the c. 1770s town jail, which was converted into a Greek Revival house in the 19th century, and the c. 1727 house of Reverend Nathaniel Rogers. One of the more unusual later buildings included on the ...