East Forsyth High School is located in the town of Kernersville in Forsyth County, North Carolina. It is laid out in a college-campus style with numerous small buildings rather than a single large building.[3]
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East Forsyth High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
2500 W Mountain St. 27284 United States | |
Coordinates | 36°06′59″N 80°09′04″W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Established | 1962[1] |
School district | Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools |
CEEB code | 342015 |
Principal | Rusty Hall |
Staff | 101.86 (FTE)[2] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1,690 (2023–2024)[2] |
Student to teacher ratio | 16.59[2] |
Color(s) | Navy blue and white |
Athletics conference | NCHSAA 4A |
Mascot | Eagle |
Newspaper | Talon |
Yearbook | Aquila |
Website | wsfcs |
Facilities
East Forsyth currently has a total of nine main classroom buildings; four buildings house eight classrooms, two others house ten classrooms, and one houses up to sixteen. Two "pod" trailers are housed in the back of the campus. There are also two gyms, an auditorium, cafeteria, courtyard, technology building, and an office building with a library.[3]
Recently completed renovations on campus have ultimately changed the entire school. A two-story, L-shaped building has been built; it houses 16 classrooms, office facilities, as well as a new media center. The existing office building has been renovated as well; it now houses fine arts as well as the business and technology education programs on campus. The auditorium and some of the current buildings have been updated, and new traffic pattern is also in place for the campus.
Athletics
East Forsyth High School offers many sports including: Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, Dance Team, Cheerleading, Softball, Cross Country, Swimming, Tennis, Football, Volleyball, Golf, Wrestling, Field Hockey, Lacrosse, and Track.
In 1992, East Forsyth won its first football state championship. Led by Head Coach Joe Bill Ellender and the AP All-State trio of, quarterback Joe Lagarde, and OL/DL leaders James Clyburn and Gary Wadford, the Eagles completed a 15–0 season by defeating Northern High School of Durham, North Carolina, in the NCHSAA 4A championship game. They finished the 1992 season ranked 15th in the USA TODAY super 25 poll.
In 2008, East Forsyth Had one of its best seasons by going 12–2. That record was beat in 2012 with East Forsyth Going 13–1 with an undefeated 11–0 regular season. In the 2014 season, the Eagles won another conference championship beating Northwest Guildford 36–15.
East Forsyth's main rival is Glenn High School. In past football seasons, the East-Glenn game was one of the first games of the year. Now with both teams in the Piedmont-Triad 4A conference.
On December 4, 2015, the football season came to a close one game away from the 4AA state championship. The East Forsyth Eagles fell in overtime against nationally ranked Mallard Creek of Charlotte, North Carolina. The final score was 41–38. The Western regional final broke an attendance record, making it the most attended game in East Forsyth History at Fred E. Lewis field.
In December 2018, East Forsyth won its second football state championship. The Eagles beat Scotland High to win their first football state title since 1992.
In December 2019, East Forsyth won its third football state championship. Defending its title against Cardinal Gibbons, beating them 24–21.
Notable alumni
- Madison Bailey — actress[4]
- Turner Battle — college basketball coach[5]
- Chante Black — WNBA player
- Alan Caldwell — NFL defensive back[6]
- Ashley Christensen — chef, restaurateur, author, and culinary celebrity
- Ryan Dull — MLB pitcher
- Emily V. Gordon — Award-Winning Writer and producer of The Big Sick; wife of Kumail Nanjiani
- DeLana Harvick — former co-manager of Kevin Harvick Incorporated; wife of Kevin Harvick[7]
- Ricky Hickman — professional basketball player
- Brent LaRue — middle-distance runner, represented Slovenia at the 2012 Summer Olympics[8]
- Kevin Mattison — MLB outfielder[9]
- Ben Newnam — professional soccer player
- Connor Norby — MLB second baseman[10]
- Danny O'Brien — Canadian Football League coach and former quarterback
- Tyson Patterson — professional basketball player[11]
- Josh Pittman — professional basketball player
- Jaylen Raynor — college football quarterback for the Arkansas State Red Wolves
- Greg Scales — NFL tight end[12]
- Geno Segers — actor for Disney's Pair of Kings
- Alec Zumwalt — MLB coach[13]
References
External links
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