Jump to content

Sandwich Community High School

Coordinates: 41°38′23″N 88°36′54″W / 41.63972°N 88.61500°W / 41.63972; -88.61500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sandwich Community High School
Address
Map
515 Lions Road

,
60548

United States
Coordinates41°38′23″N 88°36′54″W / 41.63972°N 88.61500°W / 41.63972; -88.61500
Information
School typePublic secondary
Opened1855 (1855)
School districtSandwich Community Unit School District 430
SuperintendentTom Sodaro
CEEB code143830
NCES School ID173537003693
PrincipalShane Darnell
Staff43.00 (FTE)[1]
Grades9–12
GenderCoed
Enrollment569 (2022–2023)[1]
Average class size18.2
Student to teacher ratio13.23[1]
CampusSuburban
Colour(s)  black
  orange
Athletics conferenceKishwaukee River Conference
NicknameIndians/Lady Indians[2]
YearbookReflector
Communities servedSandwich, Somonauk, Lake Holiday, Sheridan, Plano, Millington, Newark
Websiteshs.sandwich430.org
[3]

Sandwich Community High School is a public four-year secondary education school located in Sandwich, Illinois, about 60 miles from Chicago. The high school is part of Sandwich Community Unit School District 430. The school is a member of the Interstate Eight Conference, and the school participates in Baseball, Softball, Volleyball, Cross Country, Soccer, Golf, Boys/Girls Basketball, Wrestling, Boys/Girls Track & Field, Fishing, Swimming and Diving, Doing It, Scholastic Bowl, and all music-related competitions. The high school is currently a class 4A school in Football, while competing as class A or B in other events due to its enrollment size.

History

[edit]

The school was initially held at Herman E. Dummer School, which at that time served as the high school until the class sizes grew too big for the school. The new high school was opened in 1967, and the facility on Lions Road is still used to this day for the high school. With the help of a few referendums, the school has added on and grown a few times since the initial construction, with the last phase of addition having been in the summer of 2007 with the addition of two portable classrooms onto the site to allow for more classes to be held. The school district currently has purchased land near the intersection of E. Lions Road and N. Millington Road, with the intent to build a new high school, but when that will be is still undetermined.

Athletics

[edit]

As of the 2019-2020 school year, Sandwich competes as part of the Interstate Eight Conference, with its inclusion into the conference having been in 1979. Before that, Sandwich was part of the Little Ten Conference, of which it was one of the schools included during the conference's creation. Sandwich had received regular-season basketball championships in the conference in 1920, 1927, and 1937.[4] In 1967, Sandwich and Plano High School both left to form the Northeast Conference, which later became the Interstate Eight Conference. Sandwich won four state titles for wrestling in 1991, 1997, 1999, and 2001. The Cross Country and Track & Field programs at the school are normally perennial qualifiers for postseason competition, but as of this time, there is no state title.[2]

The War of The Line

[edit]

Sandwich and neighboring Plano have had a contentious history, not only due to them sharing a common border, but they also reside along the DeKalb-Kendall County Line, which sits only about a mile away from Sandwich High School. Both schools were charter members of the Little Ten Conference, which tied them together as far back as 1919. Sandwich also followed Plano's departure from the conference in 1967, so it is fair to say that both are tied to the other's history. The rivalry game was traditionally played during the Sandwich Fair, on the Friday or 3rd Day of the Fair. Usually after the game, fans of both schools, whose strong rivalry generally carries over off of the field and into the fairgrounds, resulting in taunting and fighting between the fans throughout the rest of the night of the game. This was the case until 2006, when the conference added four more schools into the then eight member conference, resulting in a conference divisional split and the schools being placed in opposite divisions based on size. It was then decided that the game would be moved back later into the season to accommodate more teams earlier in the season. However, Plano grew in size, and was allowed to replace one of the smaller schools in the other division, and both schools were together once again. The schools have competed against each other since, with Sandwich having won the most recent meeting against the two high schools. Sandwich has won 5 of the last 10 meetings, with two of the losses having come from a Back-to-Back IHSA 4A Championship Plano team in 2005 and 2006.

Activities

[edit]

Sandwich has approximately 20 clubs and organizations:

  • Future Farmers of America (FFA)
  • Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA)
  • Tri-M Music Honor Society (Tri-M)
  • National Honor Society (NHS)
  • Future Educators of America (FEA)
  • Worldwide Youth in Science and Engineering (WYSE)
  • DCP-SAFE (DeKalb County Partnership for a Substance Abuse Free Environment)
  • SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions)
  • SHS Student Leadership Council (SLC)
  • SHS History Club
  • SHS Computer Club
  • SHS Writing Club
  • SHS Science Club
  • SHS Fine Arts Club
  • SHS French Club (Defunct since 2007)
  • Kendall County Project SNOWBALL
  • SHS Spanish Club
  • SHS Drama Club
  • SHS Yearbook
  • SHS Student Council

Music Program

[edit]

Sandwich's bands and choirs have performed in multiple states, and some provinces in Canada. The bands have been invited to, and attended the 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, and 58th Presidential Inaugurations and performed at the corresponding Presidential Inaugural Festival at the University of Maryland in College Park, MD. During the 2005 Inaugural Festival the band received the "Spirit of Washington" award, which honored bands for their courteous nature. The competitive marching band, the "Renegade Regiment", has received multiple championships in class A and AA. In 2006, the Renegade Regiment played during the Calgary Stampede in the World Indoor Marching Band Championships, which were held at the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary. The band received 5th Place, and had the honorary title of being the 5th best band in the world. The bands and choirs are also involved in the Illinois Music Educators Association (IMEA) Festivals, IHSA music sweepstakes, and the Interstate Eight Band/Choir Festival.

Wind Ensemble

[edit]

This band is open to students through chair auditions, which also determine placement within the respective sections. This band has been in existence since 2006, when it was split from the Concert Band due to size constraints of the room being used for practice. The Wind Ensemble is regarded as the Honor Band, while the Concert Band is for anybody that takes the Concert Band class. The 2008-2009 Wind Ensemble was in participation in the 2009 Inaugural Festival, while members of the 2006-2008 Wind Ensemble were participants in the 2005 Inaugural Festival, as the band had not yet split into the Wind Ensemble and Concert Band. Prior to the 2005-2006 School year, the school had a single Concert Band, having only split into two bands due to an increase in size which would exceed the capability of the existing band room to accommodate.

Concert Band

[edit]

Open to all without a need for tryout, aside to judge placement within the section, the Concert Band is the larger of the two bands, and it, along with the Wind Ensemble comprise all the students who participate in other Music program events and activities.

Jazz Band

[edit]

The Jazz Band is open to students who wish to play jazz/blues pieces, or for those who wish to learn a new instrument in the process. Jazz I is for beginner students, or students inexperienced in either playing a new instrument or in playing in the Jazz Band. Jazz II is for more experienced students, and entrance into it is through tryout. The Jazz Band has played in multiple places throughout the country, with a trip to Kansas City in 2007 having been the most recent.

Pep Band

[edit]

The Pep Band is a band that plays during the Basketball season, ranging from November until January. The band does not require a tryout, and the band is more of a 'fun' band than its more serious counterparts in the department.

Marching Indians

[edit]

The Marching Indians is a band that until recently, was mandatory for students to take part in, so that the band classes would satisfy the Phys. Ed. exemption requirement for the school. The band is now voluntary, with some component of it still mandatory for students. The band does field drills during halftime, and it plays in the endzone during football games in the fall.

Renegade Regiment

[edit]

The Renegade Regiment is the competitive marching band for Sandwich High School, and has had a long life in the MACBDA marching band circuit. The Renegade Regiment, or 'Regiment' for short, was started by SHS tenured band director, Terry Wickwire, who was a former US Air Force musician. The band, started in the late 1970s, has competed in numerous competitions. In the summer, the band would perform in southern Wisconsin, in places near and around Madison, along with doing a multitude of parades in the Western Suburbs of Chicago. The Regiment had a short-lived band competition, which was held at the high school for only a couple of years, but more emphasis was put on its fall counterpart. In the fall, the band would do competitions around the Chicago suburbs, and as an end to the Regiment season, the band would hold an invitational competition at the high school, known as "Musicfest". In 2006, the band had won its second class AA title, and received 5th Place at the World Indoor Marching Band Championships in Calgary, Alberta.[citation needed] The band has received at least two Class A titles, five consecutive Class AA titles, and they have received second and third at many shows while in the MACBDA circuit.

2006 Tour-Minimally Speaking

[edit]
Location Place for Field Class Place for Parade Best Winds Best Drum Line Best Guard Best Drum Major Grand Champion
Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin 2nd AA
Oregon, Wisconsin 3rd Open
Whitnall HS/Greenfield, Wisconsin 1st AA
Racine, Wisconsin 1st AA
Dakota, Illinois 1st AA X
Traverse City, Michigan 4th Open X
Janesville, Wisconsin 1st AA X
MACBDA Finals-Sun Prairie, Wisconsin 1st AA X X X X
Dwight, Illinois 1st AA 1st X X X X X
A A Stagg HS/Palos Hills, Illinois 2nd AA
Downers Grove South HS/Downers Grove, Illinois 3rd AA X
Marengo, Illinois 1st AA X X

2007 Tour-Scheherazade

[edit]
Location Place for Field Class Place for Parade Best Winds Best Drum Line Best Guard Best Drum Major Grand Champion
Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin 1st AA
Oregon, Wisconsin 1st AA
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin 1st AA
Racine, Wisconsin 1st AA
Dakota, Illinois 5th Open
Sioux Falls, South Dakota 1st AA
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 2nd AA
World Indoor Marching Band Championships/Calgary, Alberta 5th None
MACBDA Finals/Calgary, Alberta 1st AA
Dwight, Illinois EXH AA
Naperville Central HS Invitational/Lisle, Illinois 2nd A
Downers Grove South HS/Downers Grove, Illinois 3rd AA
Prospect Knight of Champions/Prospect Heights, Illinois 2nd AA X X X
Marengo, Illinois 1st AA 1st X X X

2008 Tour

[edit]
Location Place for Field Class Place for Parade Best Winds Best Drum Line Best Guard Best Drum Major Grand Champion
Naperville Central HS Invitational/Lisle, Illinois 1st A X X
Marengo, Illinois 1st AA X X

2009 Tour

[edit]
Location Place for Field Class Place for Parade Best Winds Best Drum Line Best Guard Best Drum Major Grand Champion
Prospect Knight of Champions/Prospect Heights, Illinois 8th AA
Marengo, Illinois 1st AA 2nd X X

Notable alumni

[edit]
  • Garrett Gilkey (born 1990), former American football guard who attended the school in his freshman year
  • Timothy McCune (born 1963), American business executive, Class of 1981[5]
  • Dave Graf (born 1917), Though not an alumnus, but Industrial Arts Teacher 1955 to 1976 (approx), won National Teacher of the Year in 1968, would always emphasize and nurture a student's natural talents. An extraordinary gentleman and asset to the school and community.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Sandwich Community High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved September 23, 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Conferences & Affiliated Schools". IHSA. 20 September 2019. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  3. ^ "2019 School Report Card". Sandwich Community Unit School District 430. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  4. ^ Hoxsey, Brian. "Little Ten Conference Boys Basketball Tournament History". Little Ten Conference Past Champions. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  5. ^ https://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/Timothy_S._McCune
[edit]