Hononegah Community High School

Hononegah Community High School is a public high school in Rockton, Illinois and is the only high school comprising Hononegah Community High School District 207. Located between Rockford and the southern border of Wisconsin, the school serves students from the towns of Rockton, Roscoe, Shirland, and parts of South Beloit. Specifically, the school districts Kinnikinnick School District 131, Prairie Hill School District 133, Rockton School District 140, and Shirland School District 134 all feed into the high school.[1]

Hononegah Community High School
Address
Map
307 Salem Street[1]

,
61072[1]

United States
Coordinates42°27′14″N 89°03′48″W / 42.454°N 89.0632°W / 42.454; -89.0632
Information
School typePublic Secondary
Established1923
School districtHononegah Community Consolidated High School District 207
SuperintendentMichael Dugan[2]
CEEB code143735[4]
PrincipalChad Dougherty[2]
Staff221[3]
Grades912
GenderCoed
Enrollment1,916 (2020-21)[10]
Average class size24[5]
Campus typeSuburban[7]
Color(s)  Purple
  Gold[8]
Slogan"Scholarship. Citizenship. Leadership."
Fight songOn, Wisconsin!
Athletics conference(NIC-10)[8]
MascotIndian[8]
NicknameIndians[8]
NewspaperHCHS Today[9]
YearbookThe Mack
WebsiteOfficial School Website

Hononegah Community High School opened in 1923. The school is named after the Native American Hononegah, wife of Stephen Mack Jr. Stephen Mack Jr. is credited to the founding of Rockton, Illinois.[1] The school's namesake is honored with a large mural of Hononegah in the school's main lobby.

One of the unique aspects of Hononegah was its inflatable "bubble" field house, the first of its kind for any Illinois public school, until its collapse in December 2015 due to a hailstorm.[11] It was replaced by a field house in March 2019.[12]

History

Hononegah (c.1814–1847) was the wife of Stephen Mack Jr. an employee for The American Fur Company, a pioneer to the Rock River Valley in northern Illinois and founder of the community of Rockton, Illinois. Hononegah had a strong influence on the Roscoe-Rockton area;[13] the high school of the four towns and the main thoroughfare connecting the towns are both named after her.

Athletics

Hononegah competes in the Northern Illinois Conference (NIC-10) and is a member of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA), which governs most high school athletics and competitive activities in the state. Teams are stylized as the Indians.

The following teams have finished in the top four of their respective IHSA sponsored state championship tournaments or meets:[14]

  • Football: semifinals (1996–97); 2nd place (1985–86)
  • Volleyball (girls): 2nd place (2006–07)
  • Wrestling: 4th place (2004–05, 2006–07)

Hononegah was also historically one of the drafting schools for the Rockford Icemen combined hockey program. Along with various other high schools in the area, Hononegah contributed nearly ten student athletes a year to the Rockford Icemen who, from 1997 to 2012, won fifteen consecutive Illinois state championships.[15]

On March 6, 2020, the Varsity Boys Basketball team garnered nationwide attention after winning the Regional Championship on a buzzer beater that aired on SportsCenter's Top 10 plays the following morning.[16]

Campus

Hononegah is currently made up of two buildings: a large brick building, which houses academic activities, and a field house,[17] which holds indoor sporting events and most athletic activities and classes for students, with the exception of the metal gym complex in the main building. Alongside the two buildings, the campus also contains a football stadium named Kelsey Field south of the field house, first opened in 1961,[18] and a baseball field named Weber Field southeast of Kelsey Field, opened in 2003.[19]

Notable additions to the base campus include a 1996 addition of a Performing Arts Center capable of seating 1,100[20] and an inflatable, athletic practice dome in 2002 which would later pop during a winter storm in 2015, leading to a field house in 2019.

Dome Collapse

After an ice storm in December 2015, the 13-year-old dome collapsed. It housed several events for indoor track athletes, including practices and meets, practice room for all winter sports teams, physical education classes, and various community events.

The dome was designed by Air Structures American Technologies Inc. and cost $3 million at the time of its construction in 2002. It was meant to last 15–20 years.[21]

Field House Construction & Opening

During the November 2016 general election, voters initially rejected a $44 million referendum that would increase taxes to supply funds to replace the dome and implement various other renovations throughout the school. After this rejection, a new $17.8 million referendum to fund the new field house was added to the April ballot which very narrowly passed with only 51% of voters approving the measure by a difference of 127 votes.[22]

On November 7, 2017, a groundbreaking ceremony was held, signifying the beginning of construction. School officials say they fully intend for this space to be open to the public rather than only Hononegah students.

On April 5, 2019, an opening ceremony was held to officially open the field house. It started with a ribbon cutting ceremony and was followed by activities throughout the day.[12]

Awards and recognition

In 2008, the Chicago Sun-Times listed Hononegah as the 50th best public high school in the state of Illinois based on average scores on the PSAE, and one of the ten best outside of the Chicago area.[23]

In 2010, Newsweek announced that Hononegah qualified for the magazine's 2011 list of the nation's top high schools.[24]

According to the Illinois State Board of Education, Hononegah is a "Commendable School". This means that it doesn't have any under performing student groups and has a graduation rate of over 67%. This label has been assigned to the school every year since 2018.[25]

Controversies

Gay Straight Alliance

In 2007, a student-led initiative to create a Gay Straight Alliance club to address bullying was denied by school administration. Subsequent school board meetings to discuss the GSA were met by anti-LGBT protesters and media attention. After receiving guidance from the ACLU warning that restricting the club may violate the federal Equal Access Act, the school board voted 5–2 in favor of allowing the GSA club to operate.[26][27]

Mascot

In January 2020, students created a petition asking the school board to change the school's mascot and logo, arguing that the Princess Hononegah and generic Native American iconography reinforces racist stereotypes. In response, another petition was created in support of retaining the mascot.[28]

Citing the student protests at Hononegah, State Rep. Maurice West introduced bill HB4783 to the Illinois General Assembly in March 2020 which aimed to introduce requirements that schools must meet in order to use Native American imagery.[29] The bill passed in a 13–8 vote.[30]

Notable alumni

References