The Harrison High School is a public high school serving ninth through twelve grade students in
Harrison, Arkansas, United States.
The Old Harrison High School was built in 1912 and listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 2007. It was designed by architects
Harry C. Schwebke and
R.D. Pollard in
Prairie School and
International Style architecture.[1] The building served as the high school until 1952 before becoming the junior high through 1987. Soon thereafter, the site continues to serve the community as the Boone County Heritage Museum operated by the Boone County Historical and Railroad Society.[2]
The Harrison High School mascot is the Golden Goblin with blue and gold as its school colors. The Harrison Golden Goblins participate in interscholastic activities In the 5A West Conference under the administration of the
Arkansas Activities Association. The Golden Goblins sport teams include baseball, basketball (boys/girls), cheerleading, cross country (boys/girls), debate, football, golf (boys/girls), soccer (boys/girls), softball, speech, tennis (boys/girls), track (boys/girls), and volleyball.[4]
Cross country: The girls
cross country team is one of the state's most successful with nine state championships between 1993 and 2003, including a state record eight consecutive titles (1993–2000).[5]
Basketball: The girls basketball team captured three consecutive state championships in 2000, 2001, and 2002.[5]
Baseball: The baseball team won its first
state baseball championship in 2008, with head coach Kirk Bock being awarded the District 6 Baseball Coach of the Year by the National High School Baseball Coaches of America.[6]
Soccer: As of the 2012 season, the boys soccer team is the state's only boys team with six
state soccer championships winning 5A classification titles in spring 2002–2006 and 2008. The girls team are 3-time state champions with 5A titles in 2002, 2004 and 2011. Harrison boasts the 2010
NSCAA Arkansas Girls High School Player of the Year award winner.[7]
Ida Hayman Callery - Teacher, feminist, socialist organizer, and
suffragist in Arkansas prior to
World War I. Callery traveled extensively in Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Kansas as an organizer for the
Socialist Party. Her leadership saw the Socialist Party in Arkansas reach its peak in 1914 when it claimed more than 2,000 members.[8]
F. Sheridan Garrison - Business Leader, founder of Arkansas Freightways, which became
American Freightways and then was acquired by
FedEx, becoming
FedEx Freight. A Harrison native, Garrison followed his time at HHS by becoming an honors graduate of the University of Arkansas College of Business (now called the
Sam M. Walton College of Business.[9][10]
John Paul Hammerschmidt - Republican Congressman representing Harrison and northwest Arkansas for 26 years. Hammerschmidt was a Harrison native who grew up on a family farm on Crooked Creek. His record of public service includes distinguished service in the
Army Air Corps during World War II. Before seeking public office Hammerschmidt was a lumberman, builder and building supplies businessman. In Congress, Hammerschmidt was the author and initiating sponsor of legislation that added the
Buffalo National River to the
National Park Service in 1972. He was also the original sponsor of congressional authorization for a
Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.[11]
C.D. Wright - award winning poet. Wright's poetry is notable for its experimental variety and rich colloquial sound. She was a National Book Award finalist for her 2010 volume One With Others: [a little book of her days], which won the
National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry that year.[12]
^"Walks through History"(PDF). Silva, Rachel. Arkansas Historic Preservation Program. Archived from
the original(PDF) on July 18, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2012.