Newellton High School

Coordinates: 32°4′23.4″N 91°14′32.2″W / 32.073167°N 91.242278°W / 32.073167; -91.242278

The former Newellton High School now houses Newellton Elementary School.
Newellton Elementary School (Pre-K through grade 8)
Newellton gymnasium and auditorium (renovated 1976)
1957 cornerstone; updated in 1976
Graves of the Reverend and Mrs. Aubrey Denson Foster; he was a former pastor of the First Baptist Church of Newellton, recently renovated, and a science instructor and then principal at the former Newellton High School.
Grave of George H. Prince, a former Newellton High School business teacher from St. Joseph, is located in Legion Memorial Cemetery north of Newellton.
Grave of former Tensas Parish School Superintendent Charles Ed Thompson; Mrs. Thompson died on January 2, 2010.

Newellton High School was a rural public high school in Newellton in northern Tensas Parish in northeastern Louisiana located near the Mississippi River. NHS operated throughout most of the 20th century until its closure in 2006 due to declining parish population and student enrollment. Located at 400 Verona Street adjacent to Depot Street, the NHS campus is now the site of Newellton Elementary School, which houses pre-kindergarten through the eighth grade.[1]

Background

Newellton High School was twice renovated. A second structure was completed in 1957 under Superintendent A. E. Swanson.[2] Another major renovation followed in 1976, as parts of the preceding facility were torn down and rebuilt, and the gymnasium/auditorium was refurbished. During its existence, NHS first served grades one through eleven. In 1948, the twelfth grade was added throughout Louisiana.

During the 1960s, Newellton High School won two district football championships and was the runner-up at the state competition in its division. Later Mayor Edwin G. Preis (1916-2011) and another businessman, Orrice R. Barnes (1921-1996), the Western Auto dealer,[3] were the announcers for the home football games.[4]

In August 1970, NHS was desegregated by federal court order, following the ruling by the US Supreme Court that segregation of public schools was unconstitutional. By the 1970s and 1980s, kindergarten and pre-kindergarten were added.

Reasons for closing

At the close of the 2005-2006 academic year, there were only seventy-four pupils in the high school grades. On May 18, 2006, the Tensas Parish School Board voted by a four-to-three margin to keep Newellton High School open for at least one additional year. However, parish Superintendent Carol Shipp Johnson had proposed that Newellton grades 9-12 be reassigned to St. Joseph, the parish seat, where they would attend Joseph Moore Davidson High School, which served grades 7-12 and also had a low enrollment. Grades 7-8 attend Tensas High School except for the pupils in those grades in Newellton, who remain with the elementary campus there. The former Davidson High School was named for Joseph Moore Davidson (born 1894),[5] who died in battle shortly before the armistice was signed in 1918 ending World War I.

Ultimately, financial considerations compelled the consolidation of Newellton and Davidson schools into the rearranged Tensas High School at the Davidson campus in St. Joseph. It is located across the highway from the St. Joseph Baptist Church and near the central office of the school board. Violence broke out at the consolidated school on November 2, 2006, and fourteen male students were arrested by the office of Sheriff Rickey Jones.[6]

Newellton High School lost a popular English teacher in the spring of 2006, when William Randolph "Randy" Achey(born 1952), a native of Virginia and former Alabama resident, died of heart failure. His memorial service was held in the school gymnasium.[7]

Newellton High School had a relatively new facility and the board was reluctant to abandon a structure still in good condition, even though enrollment numbers were too low. The athletic teams known as "The Bears" drew enthusiastic support from the community for many years. The football teams usually played rivals at Davidson High School or other schools in Tallulah, Mangham, or Delhi.[8] For years, Edgar Allan "Jack" Poe (1916-1994) of Newellton wrote the "Our Bears" column in the parish weekly newspaper, The Tensas Gazette.

Citing low enrollments, the school board had already closed Waterproof High School, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places,[9] and Lisbon Elementary School, both in the economically depressed town of Waterproof in the southern part of Tensas Parish.

In 2011, the remaining Newellton Elementary School, which is 85 percent African American, enrolled 219 of the approximately 760 public school pupils in Tensas Parish. Every child in the school is eligible for federal Title I assistance.[10]

Teachers and principals

Allen Ray Bozeman (born 1947) of Dry Prong in Grant Parish, served as the last NHS principal and prepared the school improvement plan for the 2004-2005 academic year submitted to the state department of education.[11]

Alton Browning (1917-1979), vocational and agriculture teacher

Virginia Lee Crossno (born 1934), home economics teacher; later on faculty and administration of Northwestern State University in Natchitoches

Reverend Aubrey Denson Foster (1926-2003), former pastor of the First Baptist Church of Newellton and science teacher at NHS, succeeded William Vosburg as principal in the middle 1970s.

Jerry Don Head (1938-1970), head football coach and civics teacher; later crop-duster killed in air crash

Genell Moore McDonald Owen (1914-1972), English teacher

Hardy "Buddy" Palmer (born 1936), football coach and mathematics teacher

Wallace Ewing Prather (1924-2002) served as the Newellton principal during the 1950s and 1960s.

George H. "Tinker" Prince (1924-1992), business teacher

Reverend Donald Lee Thornton, Sr. (born 1936), a native of Tunica, Mississippi, graduate of Mississippi College in Clinton, former pastor of the Flowers Landing Baptist Church in Newellton, mathematics and chemistry teacher and coach at NHS from 1958-1978, pastor in Waverly in Madison Parish. Thornton's wife, the former Beatrice Walters, graduated from NHS in 1959, and their son, Donald, Jr. (born 1960), graduated in 1978.

William Edward "Bill" Vosburg (born October 13, 1940), a native of New Roads, served as the NHS principal during the early years of racial transition. In 1977 Vosburg began a four-year stint as parish superintendent. In 1981, he entered business in Ruston in Lincoln Parish. [12]

Charles Edgar Thompson (1932–1993), a Tensas Parish native, was superintendent during the desegregation period; he later accepted the position of deputy superintendent for special education in Baton Rouge under state Education Superintendent J. Kelly Nix.[13]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Newellton High School". schoolmatters.com. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  2. Plaque at Newellton High School, H.H. Land Architects, 1957
  3. "Social Security Death Index". ssdi.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  4. "Edwin G. Preis". Baton Rouge Morning Advocate, July 29, 2011. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  5. "Edith Ziegler, Tensas Parish Archives". usgwarchives.net. Retrieved January 6, 2011.
  6. Monroe News Star, 3 November 2006:
  7. "Randy Achey (1952-2006)". natchezdemocrat.com. Retrieved January 5, 2011.
  8. "Newellton Bears Football". maxpreps.com. Retrieved December 31, 2010.
  9. "National Register of Historic Places: Louisiana, Tensas Parish". nationalregisterof historicplaces.com. Retrieved January 10, 2011.
  10. "Newellton High School: Overview". localschooldirectory.com. Retrieved January 4, 2010.
  11. "School Improvement Plan: Newellton High School, 2004-2005" (PDF). tensas.k12.la.us. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
  12. "School Head Appointed", Tensas Gazette, April 8, 1981, p. 1.
  13. "Nix keeps deputies on payroll", Minden Press-Herald, Minden, Louisiana, July 31, 1981, p.1
  14. "Meet the Staff: David L. Barnes, M.D." Davidbarnesmd.com. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  15. "Tributes to the Lost Crew Members" (PDF). Beacon Magazine. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
  16. Obituary of Wilson Lindsey Coit, Natchez Democrat, November 10, 1999
  17. "Barbara Sue Doyle Hage". The Monroe News-Star. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  18. "Phil Preis". classmates.com. Retrieved January 20, 2011.
  19. 1 2 Obituary of Charles Edgar "Ed" Thompson," Baton Rouge Morning Advocate, November 28, 1993
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