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north+knox+high+school Latitude and Longitude:

38°50′06″N 87°18′49″W / 38.835110°N 87.313587°W / 38.835110; -87.313587
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
North Knox Jr./Sr. High School
Address
10890 North SR 159

, ,
United States
Coordinates 38°50′06″N 87°18′49″W / 38.835110°N 87.313587°W / 38.835110; -87.313587
Information
Type Public high school
Established1963
School districtNorth Knox School Corporation
PrincipalMatt Sandefer
Faculty35.53 (FTE) [1]
Grades7-12
Enrollment606 (2018-19) [1]
Student to teacher ratio17.06 [1]
Color(s)     
Athletics conference Blue Chip Conference
Southwest Seven Football Conference
Team nameWarriors
Rivals Vincennes Lincoln, South Knox, Washington, Linton-Stockton
Gym Capacity4,000
Website Official Website

North Knox High School is a public school located between the towns of Bicknell and Freelandville, Indiana.

About

The North Knox School Corp. came into existence in school year 1963-64, with the consolidation of all the smaller northern Knox County high schools to one central location. Those small-town high schools were located at Bicknell, Freelandville, Bruceville, Oaktown, Edwardsport, Sandborn, Westphalia and Emison. At that time, grades 1-8 remained at the smaller locations, with the exception of Edwardsport students, who were transferred to Freelandville School.

The original (1963–64) location of the North Knox High School was in the old Edwardsport school building. This Edwardsport building served as North Knox High School until the current structure on Indiana State Road 159 was opened in school year 1974-75. At this time, the original high school building at Edwardsport became North Knox East for grades 1-8. New structures were also opened in Bicknell and near Bruceville housing North Knox Central and North Knox West, grades 1-6. The current school building was based on the "open study" concept that was popular during the school's planning stages of the late 1960s. The school is all one level.

The school corporation is made up of the following towns in Northern Knox County: Bruceville, Bicknell/Ragsdale, Oaktown/Emison/Busseron, Edwardsport, Freelandville, Sandborn/Westphalia.

The school currently has 624 students enrolled with 48 faculty members. [2]

Athletics

The North Knox High School mascot name is "Warriors". The original school colors were black and white, with red being added a few years later.

In 2006-2007 the football field went under renovation adding a two-story press box and a new team barn with "North Knox" on the top of the building and a Warrior head emblem on the front. The high school received new lockers in 2008. In 2004, the pool was filled in to create an auxiliary gym after swimming was taken out of the curriculum. The auxiliary gym now houses many activities.

Notable athletic alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "North Knox Jr-Sr High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  2. ^ "North Knox Jr-Sr High School in BICKNELL, IN | Best High Schools | US News". www.usnews.com. Retrieved 2016-03-16.

External links


north+knox+high+school Latitude and Longitude:

38°50′06″N 87°18′49″W / 38.835110°N 87.313587°W / 38.835110; -87.313587
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
North Knox Jr./Sr. High School
Address
10890 North SR 159

, ,
United States
Coordinates 38°50′06″N 87°18′49″W / 38.835110°N 87.313587°W / 38.835110; -87.313587
Information
Type Public high school
Established1963
School districtNorth Knox School Corporation
PrincipalMatt Sandefer
Faculty35.53 (FTE) [1]
Grades7-12
Enrollment606 (2018-19) [1]
Student to teacher ratio17.06 [1]
Color(s)     
Athletics conference Blue Chip Conference
Southwest Seven Football Conference
Team nameWarriors
Rivals Vincennes Lincoln, South Knox, Washington, Linton-Stockton
Gym Capacity4,000
Website Official Website

North Knox High School is a public school located between the towns of Bicknell and Freelandville, Indiana.

About

The North Knox School Corp. came into existence in school year 1963-64, with the consolidation of all the smaller northern Knox County high schools to one central location. Those small-town high schools were located at Bicknell, Freelandville, Bruceville, Oaktown, Edwardsport, Sandborn, Westphalia and Emison. At that time, grades 1-8 remained at the smaller locations, with the exception of Edwardsport students, who were transferred to Freelandville School.

The original (1963–64) location of the North Knox High School was in the old Edwardsport school building. This Edwardsport building served as North Knox High School until the current structure on Indiana State Road 159 was opened in school year 1974-75. At this time, the original high school building at Edwardsport became North Knox East for grades 1-8. New structures were also opened in Bicknell and near Bruceville housing North Knox Central and North Knox West, grades 1-6. The current school building was based on the "open study" concept that was popular during the school's planning stages of the late 1960s. The school is all one level.

The school corporation is made up of the following towns in Northern Knox County: Bruceville, Bicknell/Ragsdale, Oaktown/Emison/Busseron, Edwardsport, Freelandville, Sandborn/Westphalia.

The school currently has 624 students enrolled with 48 faculty members. [2]

Athletics

The North Knox High School mascot name is "Warriors". The original school colors were black and white, with red being added a few years later.

In 2006-2007 the football field went under renovation adding a two-story press box and a new team barn with "North Knox" on the top of the building and a Warrior head emblem on the front. The high school received new lockers in 2008. In 2004, the pool was filled in to create an auxiliary gym after swimming was taken out of the curriculum. The auxiliary gym now houses many activities.

Notable athletic alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "North Knox Jr-Sr High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  2. ^ "North Knox Jr-Sr High School in BICKNELL, IN | Best High Schools | US News". www.usnews.com. Retrieved 2016-03-16.

External links


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