The first graduating class found of record was in 1917 with three known graduates. The school began as an all-white school, due to the inhabitants of the community, and is now one of the most diverse and integrated schools in the nation.[4][5][6]
Its boundary includes North Kansas City,
Avondale, and portions of
Gladstone south of NW Englewood Road.[10][11]
History
Throughout the school's history, several buildings have been built and torn down. Currently, the only remaining building of the original multi-building campus is the three-story Main building. Northtown began significant renovations beginning the fall of 2016. As of the 2020–2021 school year, the renovations are complete with the addition of A, B, and C wings. A Building, containing a new performing arts center and orchestra, band, choir, woodshop, and theatre classrooms, was finished in August 2020. B Building, containing numerous new classrooms and study rooms, was finished before the onset of the 2018–2019 school year. C Building, containing a new cafeteria, main gymnasium, auxiliary gymnasium, weight room, and locker rooms, was completed for the 2018–2019 school year. Additionally, the old Main building underwent massive renovations to fix safety concerns and put in a new multimedia center and more classrooms. Northtown was one of the only local schools to have an open campus. However, this changed with the completion of the schools' renovation; the campus is now a closed campus. Students and alumni may recall buildings such as the "Academy" or "South Campus" and the Norclay building (on the other side of Howell street). Both were closed at the beginning of the 2020–2021 school year as well, and the "Academy" or "South Campus" (south of the Main building) was torn down and replaced by a parking lot.
The stone wall around the NKCHS football field was created as a works project during the
Great Depression.[12] It has been ranked the Most Interesting High School
Football Field in the
Kansas City area by the Kansas City Star, and has been used for local commercials, including
Metro Sports.
The current main building was contracted to be built the first of March, 1925 as documented in the 1925 NKCHS Owl Yearbook for a total cost of $190,000. The contract was awarded to Fritzlen & Hufford Construction in Liberty, Missouri. The 1926 NKCHS Owl yearbook describes the opening and dedication of the new building on Sunday afternoon, January 24, 1926 by Missouri Governor Baker.
One of the buildings where classes were held was the Hiram McElroy Dagg building.[13]
Mascot
The school's mascot is the hornet. Although many have thought the original mascot was an owl, no evidence of that exists in NKCHS yearbooks. There is, however, evidence of the hornet mascot in the 1929 yearbook. The confusion comes with the name of the yearbook from 1924 through 1949; which was The Owl. High school jewelry like pins also bore the image of an owl; however, there is no evidence that the owl was the school's mascot. In the 1929 Owl yearbook, the Pep Squad states, "All right, let's everybody give fifteen big "Rahs" for the "Hornets". In the 1930 NKCHS Owl yearbook, the hornet is shown on basketball players' shirts.[14]
Yearbook
The Owl yearbook was printed from 1924 through 1949. No yearbook was printed in 1933, 1932 or 1927 for reasons unknown. The school adopted a new name for the yearbook in 1950: the Purgold.[15]
Athletics
In the 2019 season, the women's basketball team defeated Jefferson City High School in the state championship game. Head Coach Jeff Lacy was also named Coach of the Year.
HOSA; Future Health Leaders National Honor Society
Model UN
Muslim Student Association
NKC Book Club
NKC Hockey Club
NKC Powerlifting
Northtown Disc Golf Club
Northtown eSports
Northtown Theatre Association/International Thespian Society Troupe 2191
National Honors Society
Paper RPG Club
Quill & Scroll
Scholar Bowl
Science Olympiad
Sports Talk Club
Student Council
Student Advocates for Speech
Teach Club
Technology Student Association
The Writer's Society
Women’s Empowerment
Young Americans for Freedom
Young Progressives
Zero Hour
Video Game Development
Men's Mental Health Club
Notable alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's
verifiability policy. Please
improve this article by removing names that do not have independent
reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate
citations.(August 2023)
Al Conway, Class of 1948, All-American running back (1952), 1st round draft choice for the Philadelphia Eagles, NFL umpire, Super Bowl official, NAIA Hall of Fame, William Jewell College Hall of Fame, Missouri Sports Hall of Fame, North Kansas City High School Football Coach and math teacher[24][25][26][27][28][29][30]
Connie Dover, Class of 1976, singer, Emmy Award-winning producer and composer[31]
Bill Kelso, Class of 1958, Major League Baseball player and scout, owner of Kelso's Pizza restaurants[33]
Mark Patton, Class of 1976, actor, Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddie's Revenge, Come Back To The Five & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean, Never Sleep Again – The Elm Street Legacy; soap opera General Hospital[34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41]
Phil Snowden, Class of 1956, former University of Missouri quarterback, Missouri Democratic state senator, and curatorial, University of Missouri[51][52]
^620 E. 23rd Avenue North Kansas City, Missouri 64116.
"North Kansas City High School". Nkcschools.org. Retrieved 2013-02-25.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
^A Nightmare on Elm Street 2 – Freddy's Revenge. A Nightmare on Elm Street 2 – Freddy's Revenge: Mark Patton, Kim Myers, Robert Rusler, Clu Gulager, Hope Lange, Robert Englund, Jack Sholder, Robert Shaye, David Chaskin: Movies & TV.
ISBN978-0780630857.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)