'Danville High School' is a public high school located in
Danville,
Vermilion County, Illinois. Its enrollment was 1,570 students during the
2005-
2006 academic year, placing it among the 200 largest
high schools in Illinois. DHS is part of Danville District 118, which also includes two middle schools and eight elementary schools. The DHS mascot is the
Viking.
Danville High School is located in an industrial town district in Midwestern Illinois, with an estimated population of 112,000. The four-year high school has approximately 1,600 students. The school offers a diverse curriculum that includes subjects from applied technology, humanities, language arts, math, science, social studies, and special education divisions. DHS has an Honors Program for qualified students who may choose to instead participate in one of two specialized academies - AIMS (Academy for Interest in Medical Science) and MERIT (Math, Engineering, and Information Technology)
Famous DHS students include entertainers such
Emmy-winning brothers
Dick Van Dyke and
Jerry Van Dyke, and
Oscar winners
Donald O'Connor and
Gene Hackman. Other notable people include
mystery writer Susan Wittig Albert,
astronaut Joe Tanner, professional
baseball player
Jason Anderson, and professional
basketball player
Keon Clark.
John Scopes, defendant of the
Scopes Monkey Trial, was both a student and a teacher at DHS. After college, Scopes taught at Danville for one year before moving to
Dayton, Tennessee, where he was famously convicted for teaching
evolution.
History
Danville High School began with the most humble of origins in a spare room over the Yeomans, Shedd, & LeSeure Hardware Store Yeomans, Shedd & LeSeure Hardware Storeat 65 E. Main in September, 1870. There is some question whether it actually began as a public school as we know it today. Danville High School was at first founded without the help of the community and soon began to grow with it. The sole member of the first faculty was Mrs. Belle Spillman, who taught the first high school lesson in Danville, Illinois. Her husband, who died in 1867, had taught at one of the seminaries that preceded the creation of Danville High School. In the days after the Civil War, the typical youth would attend school no longer than his/her 13th or 14th year. The high school began in response to the desire of some Danville families who wanted more advanced public education locally.
Sixteen pupils were there for roll call on that first day of school in September, 1870, above the Yeomans, Shedd, & LeSeure Hardware Store. These charter DHS students, five boys and 11 girls, were as follows: Augusta Clark, Eudora Denny, Luella English, Joseph Force, Lizzie Fillinger, William Gurley, Lucy Harmon, Charles Hollaway, Delilah Jones, Lottie Jones, Laura Lamon, Joseph O’Neal, Fronia Roberts, Charity Sanders, Edwin Smith, and Mary Webster. Even with the small faculty and student body, such subjects as Greek, Mental Philosophy, Science of Wealth, Analysis, and Astronomy were offered. The school year was divided into three terms with a week of vacation between trimesters. Three of these original 16 students, Laura Lamon, Delilah Jones, and Mary Webster, became the first three graduates of Danville High School at its first commencement held June 14, 1872. One of them, Laura Lamon, resided in the Lamon House, which is now situated at Lincoln Park as a museum. Her grandfather, Dan Beckwith, and her great-uncle, Amos Williams, were among Danville’s founders and its first pioneers.
In 1872, Danville High School moved to rooms on the third floor of the first First Washington School, DHS' home 1872-1888Washington School, located on the south end of the city block surrounded by Gilbert, Madison, Pine, and Seminary Streets. Danville High School remained at this location for 16 years. Enrollment rose and fell, reaching 152 in 1876, but dropping to 80 in 1879. Principal Silas Gillan (1879-1886) required each student to spell every word correctly from a prepared list in order to graduate. By the late 1880’s, the enrollment had increased to such an extent that students were forced out into the halls. Due to the increasing enrollment, the school board constructed the first Danville High School building in 1888 just north of the first Washington School; the first DHS fronted Seminary Street, as well as Gilbert and Pine Streets. The class of 1888 was the last class to attend school in the old Washington School. Its commencement was held on Thursday evening, June 7, 1888, at the Grand Opera House, now the Fischer Theater. The class history of the class of 1888 was found and returned to DHS in 1989 by the granddaughter of Grace Haggard Rearick who was the secretary of that class. This history, which Grace Haggard read at the graduation ceremony, relates that after vacations that the students, “…returned gladly to the familiar old school room with many better resolves for better improvement in the future. Alas, how soon to be broken? And this we have continued year after year, gradually advancing and can now say of the dear old school we are leaving, ‘With all thy faults, I love thee still.’” Grace Haggard later married George Rearick who became mayor of Danville. Grace Haggard Rearick died in 1965, aged 95 years of age. Her class history was found by her granddaughter, Martha Rearick, while housecleaning and was donated to DHS in 1989.
First DHS (1888-1924), Gilbert at SeminaryIn the first high school, music instruction began with a choir and the formation of a 16-piece orchestra. By 1898, 273 students were enrolled at DHS, which rose to 340 in 1906. In 1907, the second Washington School was built south of the first DHS, replacing the first school of that name. The second Washington School, which stood until 1980, housed many DHS classes as the first high school became even more crowded as the enrollment increased; its cornerstone now sits on the west campus of the current Danville High School. In 1912, DHS had the largest graduating class until that date – 62 students. The class of 1912 was the first to wear caps and gowns and to leave a class gift. That year, the gift was a massive oak desk for the study room assembly. This desk, inscribed with “Class of 1912,” is presently located in the library at DHS. In September, 1915, a student named John Scopes entered DHS as a 15-year-old freshman and attended one year before moving from the area. John Scopes later became well known as the teacher who challenged the Tennessee state law by teaching evolution at Dayton (TN) High School; his story is memorialized in the novel, Inherit the Wind.
By 1916, the old high school was so crowded that the entire high school building was full in addition to the basement and its tar paper annex, which was dubbed “The Cow Shed” by the students. By this date, the entire first floor of the new Washington School was used for high school instruction. These conditions remained unbearable from 1915 to May, 1923, when a large oval stone fell from the top of the old DHS building on to the ground. The incident prompted the school board to finally build a new DHS and replace the “old high school”. While hopelessly too small, the old high school was only 36 years old when vacated in 1924.
Mr. I. P. Gedney, a Chicago contractor, was employed to construct the new high school for the then staggering sum of one million dollars.Current DHS under construction, 1924; Fairchild entrance with interurban tracks in frontThe new DHS received its early nickname, “The Million Dollar School,” by local citizens. The new DHS was, at the time of its construction, one of the finest high school buildings in the state and in this part of the nation. The new Danville High School was ready for the first day of school in September, 1924. Mr. Gedney went broke building DHS. He sold all of his equipment here and returned to Chicago penniless.Since 1924, the adolescents as well as the community of Danville. have utilized the wonderful facility that he constructed.
Danville High School remains in the facility built in 1924. DHS opening day, September 1924Additions and modifications have occurred since 1924 to accommodate new programs and innovations – business applications, driver’s education, computer instruction, music performance, etc. As the music program grew, additions were made to house instrumental programs. In 1939, the bleachers in the gym were switched from the east and west walls to the north and south walls; classroom and athletic offices were also added at this time. In 1973, the four-story addition onto the Fairchild side of DHS provided for new art rooms, science laboratories, library areas, and English classrooms; not long after its construction, the community regretted the loss of the former façade of DHS. In 1991, the building was renovated and significantly increased in size. That year the industrial education building was torn down and a large addition was built onto the south end of the building including a new entrance that included a facsimile of the original school clock over its door, music classrooms, computer labs, industrial technology rooms, new general classrooms, as well as a spacious field house to handle indoor meets as well as the many practices for both boys and girls teams.
School Songs
'Cheer Song'
Hail, Hail the gang's all here
All out for Danville High.
So let's join in a cheer
while we're all gathered here.
Cheer for old Danville High.
We are ready to fight for the Maroon and White
For dear old Danville High,
For her honor and fame,
And her glorious name,
We will stand every loyal fan.
'Fight Song'
So fight Danville, fight for Danville High
Spread fame and honor far and near,
Plunge, plunge, on to victory.
Cheer the team without a peer.
So fight for the old Maroon and White.
We're ever loyal to you.
Fight!!! Fight!!!
Cheer with all your might.
To old DHS be ever true.
Trivia
★ The school colors maroon and white were used as early as 1906, but no one remembers why these colors were chosen. When the Big 12 formed, the conference had to approve both Danville and Champaign having the same colors. Both schools were also known as the Maroons at that time.
★ The DHS gym floor used to be positioned in the other direction (north to south). In 1939, the gym was enlarged and the bleachers were moved to the north and south walls. If you look carefully near where the old WDAN booth is located, a portion of the 1924 bleachers remain at the top of the section.
★ DHS was first known as the Maroons, then for short periods of time, the basketball team was called the Silver Streaks. In 1960, DHS's nickname became the Vikings. An effort to change the colors from maroon and white to light blue and white in the 1960s was unsuccessful and the school returned to its original colors.
★ Art Mathisen, DHS's long-time principal (1969 to 1980), was a member of the famed University of Illinois basketball team, the Whiz Kids, in the early 1940s.
★ Beginning in the 1920s and continuing for several decades, tickets for all athletic events were printed by DHS students in the manual arts classes.
★ Cotton Whitlock, Class of 1924, was the first DHS student to compete in the Olympics. His event was the decathlon in the 1928 Olympics.
★ Odin, the Viking, and his trailer were purchased in 1971 by Coach Shebby and the athletic department for $3,000. Repainted in 2002, Odin currently holds court on the balcony in the gymnasium.
★ The DHS Fight song was written in 1920 by Mr. G. W. Patrick, DHS band director. The words were composed by a committee chaired by Miss Gertrude Payne, teacher, and several students including Lucille and Lorene Esslinger, John Kieran, and others. They completed the words in one evening in 1921.
★ The DHS Cheer Song has the same melody oas Harry L. Watson's, "Khaki Bill's March," which was composed during World War I. DHS adapted the words of our cheer song to match those of Illinois Wesleyan University—the only difference being Danville High was substituted for Wesleyan and maroon and white took the place of green and white.
External links
★
Danville High School