|
History of Dorman High School
Paul
M. Dorman High School opened its doors on August 27, 1964.
Named for the visionary who had dreamed of a consolidated
high school that would serve Spartanburg County's District
Six communities with excellence in education and an appreciation
for tradition, Dorman High School was a consolidation of
Roebuck and Fairforest High Schools. Mr. Paul M. Dorman
encouraged a leader in South Carolina education, Mr. Doyle
Boggs of Hartsville, to assume the principal's position.
He also found a successful athletic educator, Mr. Wade Corn,
to assume the duties of head football coach and athletic
director. Mr. Dorman selected Mr. Allen O. Clark to become
assistant principal. These three educational traditionalists,
World War II veterans, and former athletes helped Mr. Dorman
launch a tradition of community service and excellence at
the secondary level in Spartanburg School District Six.
The tradition grows stronger as this school continues to
serve our growing and changing district.
In
1964, the newly consolidated Dorman High School had fifteen
air-conditioned classrooms in two wings, offices, an air-conditioned
library, a large study hall, a vocational wing, a chorus
building and a band building, a cafeteria, and a gym with
a seating capacity of about 2,000. The 956 students and
43 teachers who entered the new school on that day remember
that Dorman's campus also had a great deal of mud and dirt
from the continuing construction.
The
school housed the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth grades. Its
Cavalier football team played on borrowed fields until the
construction of J. L. Martin Stadium in 1967. Dorman High
School continued to strive for athletic excellence under
the enthusiastic leadership of Mr. Boggs, Mr. Clark, and
Mr. Corn. In 1970, joining the state and national movement
towards integration, the staff and students of Lincoln Public
School, the previously segregated Black school of District
Six, merged with other District Six schools. Lincoln Public
School had been established in 1953
under the direction of Mr. R. P. Dawkins and served grades
one through twelve. The merger of the high school grades
of Lincoln with Dorman brought many years of educational
experience steeped in the Black community's pride in educational
excellence, providing a richer cultural experience for all
students. Paul M. Dorman High School now truly served the
needs of the entire district.
Paul
M. Dorman High School's physical plant continued to expand
to meet the needs of the growing community of learners.
The plan to enlarge the two original wings and connect them
to each of the music buildings was completed when four classrooms
were added to the main building in 1966. A second growth
phase in 1969 included the addition
of ten classrooms plus office, storage, and restroom facilities.
Additions to Wing C were completed in 1971. New plans were
already underway for additional classroom space and a new
gym. In the 1978-79 school year, Dorman opened the two-story
Wing D, housing the library and over fifty additional classrooms,
the 3920-seat McMahan Gymnasium, and
the JROTC facilities. This addition would complete the current
campus.
The
school that started as a "farmers" school now
boasts numerous advanced placement classes, 160 faculty
members, national academic team winners, and state and nationally
recognized students and faculty. In addition, Dorman High
School has continued emphasizing technology and excellence
in the fine arts and athletics.
Paul
M. Dorman High School has roots, which remain deep and strong
in the District Six soil of tradition, patriotism, community
service, and courage. However, Dorman has never been afraid
to change to benefit the children of District Six, whether
the change was consolidation, integration, expansion, technical
improvement, or curriculum adjustment.
Mr. Dorman's foundation of traditional excellence will allow
"his school" to continue to serve the entire district
into the next century through the construction of new facilities
located at the intersection of Highway 221 and I-26. In
the 2002-2003 school year, Dorman High School underwent
reorganization to provide for state of the art facilities
with a separate ninth grade school and a tenth through twelfth
grade school. This new organization facilitates a smoother
transition from the middle school to high school campus
life. The freshman high school, with approximately 150,000
square feet and 34 regular classrooms, also boast seven
science labs, an industrial technology education room, a
JROTC classroom, a gym and weight room, an additional multipurpose
room, four business labs, two art rooms, a home economics
room and food lab, a band room, a chorus room, an orchestra
room, media center, and cafeteria. The high school, with
approximately 350,000 square feet, houses 79 regular classrooms,
two JROTC classrooms, fifteen science labs, four business
labs, four art rooms, a drama room, a chorus room, a band
room, an orchestra room, a gym with arena style seating,
a practice gym, a weight room, a wrestling room, a media
center, and a cafeteria. State of the art technology and
security features are in place in the new Dorman High School
facilities. All of these new facilities allows Paul M. Dorman
High School to continue its tradition of success in academics,
the arts, and athletics.
Sources:
Harry
Gable - A Study of Dorman Senior High School for the Purpose
of Determining the Adequacy of Existing Facilities, University
of South Carolina, 1987.
Donna
Mayes - Personal Correspondence concerning Lincoln Public
School, 12/17/01.
Cheryl
Revels - Personal Correspondence concerning the new Paul
M. Dorman facilities, 12/07/01.
Paul
M. Dorman High School Alumni Directory, 1997.
|