Wauchula High School
By Spessard Stone
The predecessor of today’s Hardee County High School originated on
August 4, 1903 when the school on South 8th Avenue and Bay Street,
Wauchula, which had built by the Masons in 1895 and consisted of a
two-story frame building with the school on the ground floor and the
Masonic Hall above, became a county high school. The first commencement
class, consisting of three girls and one boy, graduated from Wauchula
High School on March 20, 1906. (1)
In 1909 a new brick building,
which faced east on the corner of West Oak Street and North Seventh
Avenue, was constructed and housed all grades, including the Wauchula
High School. In 1915 the west wing of the high school was opened. (2)
The Tampa Morning Tribune of January 7, 1915 reported:
New
High School
“Wauchula, Jan. 6, 1915--Monday the contractors
turned the new school building over to the County Board, which was
accepted.
“Prearrangements having been made for a short
dedicatory service, a large crowd of the patrons assembled on the
grounds at 9 o'clock (and) were escorted through the building after
which they assembled on the east front of the old building where Prof.
Shaver introduced architect of the building, Long, Chairman of the Board
of Trustees, Dr. Wright and member of County Board Mr. Hogan, who made
short talks.
“The contractors Marshall & Sanders of Lakeland were
congratulated by the patrons for the manner in which they completed the
job.”
The Tampa Morning Tribune of January 8, 1915 further noted:
Wauchula High School
“Wauchula, Jan. 7---The Wauchula High
School resumed work Monday morning after a fortnight for Christmas
vacation. There were a number of new pupils and two new teachers. The
faculty now consists of twenty-one able teachers. A crowd of patrons
attended the opening as it was an auspicious day in the history of the
school.
“Architect Long turned over to the trustees the keys of
the handsome new $15,000 school building.”
In the spring of
1926 a new two-story red brick $50,000 high school, bounded by Bay
Street on the north, west by Dixie Highway and east by 11 Avenue, was
opened. It burned in 1945. (3) In the late 1930s or early 1940s the
school’s name was changed to Hardee County High School.
The
Florida Advocate (Wauchula, Fla.) of Friday, April 27, 1945 reported of
the fire on April 20, 1945 which burned the school at the southeast
corner of Bay Street and Florida Avenue :
High School Completely
Gutted
“Fire of unknown origin destroyed the Hardee County High
School building in Wauchula on last Friday morning, the county
sustaining a loss of approximately $150,000. The building was gutted and
the entire contents, including school books, library and all equipment,
were destroyed.
“The alarm was turned in about 10:40 and the fire
department responded promptly but the fire had gained such headway that
the one engine was unable to do any effective work.
“Chief
Peeples stated that when he arrived on the scene he realized that his
department would be unable to handle it and calls were placed summoning
help from Fort Meade, Avon Park and Arcadia, but even when help arrived
hose was hurriedly hooked up with the fire hydrants and some nine lines
were playing streams on the fire.
“Wauchula's engine broke down
shortly after it arrived and was unable to take part in fighting the
fire.
“Local volunteer fireman worked like Trojans fighting the
fire but the heat was so severe they had to retire.
“The arrival
of the fire fighting apparatus from the neighboring cities kept the fire
confined in the building; there being no wind, none of the nearby
residents were seriously threatened.
“All of the records of
students who have graduated since the building was erected in 1925 were
in the vault in the building and it is not known whether or not they
were destroyed as the vault has not been opened; the authorities were
waiting for the vault to cool.
“It is not known what part of the
building the fire started and the fire chief states the entire building
was filled with smoke when he arrived, but it is believed to have
originated on the first floor near the center of the building. It might
have been caused by defective wiring or spontaneous combustion.
“The building cost approximately $65,000 and with the equipment and
additions the loss is conservatively estimated at $150,000 with only
$20,000 insurance.
“The walls left standing were dynamited and
torn down Friday afternoon and Saturday morning by the county
authorities. The building was destroyed just a week before the new term
was scheduled to start April 26.
“The county school board, which
was in session on the morning of the fire, met again in the afternoon
and discussed plans and arrangements to carry on the high school.
Plans For 1945-46 Term
“As the county is fortunate in that an
ample high school building is located at Zolfo Springs, the school board
passed a resolution authorizing County Superintendent Blackburn to
immediately contact the trustees of the Zolfo Springs school district
and secure permission from them for the use of the Zolfo Springs school
building to house the county high school for the 1945-46 school term.”
The newly constructed Hardee High School on Florida Avenue,
Wauchula, opened in the fall of 1949. The first graduating class was in
1950. (4)
A new high school, located at 830 Altman Road,
Wauchula, was opened in 1981. The former site on Florida Avenue became
the home for Hardee Junior High. (5)
Endnotes
(1)
Margaret Stringer, Watch Wauchula Win, 1979, pages 70-72.
(2)
Ibid, pages 73-74.
(3) Ibid, page 77.
(4) Edward Terrell
to Sue Bryan Jackson, e-mail by Jackson to author, May 24, 2001. Edward
Terrell was a member of this class.
(5) Hardee Senior High School
Web Site, 2001.
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