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TN GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION: 100 years @ MHS
HJR575
A RESOLUTION to commemorate the 100th graduating class of Maryville High School
WHEREAS, the members of this General Assembly are proud to recognize those institutions of learning that are
dedicated to providing quality education to every student in their community; and
WHEREAS, Maryville High School is one such exemplary institution that has rendered sterling service to the
children of the Maryville community for more than a century and is graduating its 100th class of students in 2019; and
WHEREAS, in 1918, Maryville High School joined the national trend and moved from a one‐year curriculum to a
four‐year curriculum, culminating with its first graduating class in 1919, composed of thirteen students,
eleven girls and two boys, taught by four teachers, three female and one male; and
WHEREAS, Maryville High School not only enjoyed its first graduating class in 1919, it was also accepted
into the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges and published its first school yearbook, Emerald Glow,
that same year; and
WHEREAS, the 1920s saw the appointment of Maryville's first school principal, Belle Pickens, in 1921,
and the school's relocation to the Maryville Polytechnic Building; and
WHEREAS, in 1930, the Maryville High School yearbook was first published as The Appalachian; the football
team was called the "Crimson Whirlwind," and the girls' basketball team was known as the "Crimsonettes"; and
WHEREAS, construction of a new building, and the current location of Maryville High School, began in 1938
and was completed in 1939, during which timeframe the school also adopted a new team name, the Red Rebels; and
WHEREAS, the Maryville community's continuing growth through the 1960s resulted in the addition of a science
wing and gymnasium in 1961 and the construction of a band building in 1966; and
WHEREAS, in 1963, four African‐American students bravely led the way as Maryville High School was integrated, with
Constance Hooper becoming the first African American student to be inducted into the Maryville High School
Chapter of the National Honor Society in 1964; and
WHEREAS, Maryville High School underwent a complete renovation in the 1980s, with the addition of
guidance offices, an administration suite, and the library annex; and
WHEREAS, in 2001, the expansion of Maryville High School's complex continued with the addition of a Senior Wing,
a fieldhouse, an orchestra room, and a new gymnasium; and
WHEREAS, 100 years since the graduation of its first class, Maryville High School is very proud of the achievements
of the Class of 2019, which is composed of 407 members; the class has the fourthhighest ACT scores in the
State of Tennessee and includes eight National Merit finalists and nine National Merit Commended students; and
WHEREAS, the members of Maryville's Class of 2019 have been offered scholarships totaling over $7 million,
with sixty‐one percent of the class planning to matriculate to a four‐year college,
twentyeight percent set to enroll in a two‐year college, three percent attending a technical school,
two percent enlisting in the armed forces, and four percent entering the work force; and
WHEREAS, it is most fitting that we specially recognize and celebrate this milestone achievement in the history
of one of the top high schools in the State of Tennessee; now, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE, THE SENATE
CONCURRING, that we commemorate the 100th anniversary of the first graduating class of Maryville High School,
honor its administration, faculty, staff, and students, both past and present, for their
commitment to quality education, and extend our best wishes for every future success.