A.H. Parker High School

1900 (1900)

010395

Darrell Hudson

36.00 (FTE)[1]

9-12

826 (2022-23)[1]

22.94[1]

Purple and white
  

Thundering Herd

May 19, 2011[2]

History[edit]

Originally known as Negro High School, Parker opened as a high school for African-American children in the fall of 1900 with a freshman class of 19 students and one teacher. The school's first graduation was June 3, 1904, at the 16th Street Baptist Church, where 15 students received diplomas. Its founding was spearheaded by pastor and banker William R. Pettiford, and Arthur H. Parker was its first principal.[5]


In September 1910 the school moved to a temporary location - the Lane Auditorium - and began offering skills for women such as sewing, knitting, and child care. By that time the enrollment was about 100 students. Construction of a permanent facility began in 1923, and by 1929 the school had an industrial building, a library and a gymnasium.


In 1937 the school had an enrollment of over 2,700, and in 1939, A.H. Parker retired as principal and the school was subsequently renamed in his honor.


The school continued to grow steadily to 3,761 students in 1946. Because of that large number, the school soon became known as the largest high school for Negroes in the world. In 1953, the school was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, an accreditation it has kept ever since.


In February 2007 the Birmingham City Board of Education announced that Parker would be one of the schools rebuilt using the city's $331 million share of the $1.1 billion Jefferson County School Construction Fund. Plans to demolish the sole remaining historic building on campus, a two-story classroom wing built in 1927 and ultimately torn down in 2011, drew opposition.[6]

Campus[edit]

Parker's current campus opened in 2011. It is a 194,250 square foot facility that was constructed at a final cost of $41 million. The new building was built on a site adjacent to the existing facility, which was then demolished in order to make room for parking and athletic facilities.[7] The school has a media center, a distance-learning lab, a career tech wing and an auditorium that can hold 750 students. The cafeteria seats more than 350.[8]

Student profile[edit]

Enrollment in grades 9-12 for the 2013–14 school year is 884 students. Approximately 98% of students are African-American, 1% are Hispanic, and 1% are multiracial. Roughly 90% of students qualify for free or reduced price lunch.[9]


Parker has a graduation rate of 49%. Approximately 62% of its students meet or exceed proficiency standards in mathematics, and 52% meet or exceed standards in reading. The average ACT score for Parker students is 19.[10]

Alabama Supreme Court justice

Oscar Adams Jr.

Major General[11]

Rufus Billups

NBA basketball player for the New Orleans Pelicans

Eric Bledsoe

MLB player

Bill Bruton

Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive tackle

Buck Buchanan

singer and actress

Nell Carter

NASA EEO director

Clyde Foster

musician

Erskine Hawkins

civil rights activist

Lola Hendricks

jazz saxophonist[12]

Haywood Henry

basketball player and coach

Wendell Hudson

former mayor of Birmingham

Larry Langford

member of the Wisconsin State Assembly

Raymond Lee Lathan

MLB player

Carlos May

MLB player

Lee May

Undersecretary of Commerce for Standards and Technology and Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology from 2015 to 2017

Willie E. May

jazz musician

Avery Parrish

Alabama legislator

George Perdue

jazz musician

Sun Ra

sculptor

John Rhoden

basketball coach

Bennie Seltzer

basketball player

Walter Sharpe

former NFL wide receiver

Olanda Truitt

lawyer and district attorney

Lynneice Washington

football player

Chris Woods

Patrica Odoms

Fallin, Jr, Wilson (1997). The African American church in Birmingham, Alabama, 1815-1963 : a shelter in the storm. New York: Taylor & Francis (Garland Pub.).  0815328834.

ISBN

Adams, Frank; Mathews, Burgin (September 4, 2012). . University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-1780-5. Retrieved October 13, 2023.

Doc: The Story of a Birmingham Jazz Man

Parker website