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David W. Carter High School

David Wendel Carter High School (commonly referred to as Dallas Carter) is a public high school located in the Oak Cliff area of Dallas, Texas, United States. The school is a part of the Dallas Independent School District and is classified as a 4A school by the UIL.[5] In 2015, the school was rated "Met Standard" by the Texas Education Agency.[6]

"Dallas Carter" redirects here. For the baseball player, see Dallas Carter (baseball).

David W. Carter High School

1966

Troy A. Tyson

185[1]

69.48 (FTE)[2]

9-12

1,082 (2022-23)[2]

15.57[2]

  Columbia Blue

  white  red

[1]

6, Joyce Foreman[3]

Central Network, Deardra Hayes-Whigham [4]

History[edit]

The school was built in 1965 and is named after David Wendel Carter, a doctor and member of the DISD school board. He served on the school board for 25 years, from 1925 to 1950, longer than any other member. Carter also served as the school board's president for 16 years.[1] The school graduated its first class of seniors in 1968.[7]


The school initially drew students from Justin F. Kimball High School; the two schools maintain a highly competitive rivalry to this day. The two schools face each other annually in football as "The Oak Cliff Super Bowl."[8]


In 2005, after the closure of the Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District, Carter absorbed some WHISD high school students.[9]


In 2011 the district re-opened Wilmer Hutchins High School.[10] Some former WHISD zones covered by Carter were rezoned to Wilmer-Hutchins.[11][12]

Baseball

Basketball

Cross Country

Football

Golf

Soccer

Softball

Swimming and Diving

Tennis

Track and Field

Volleyball

Wrestling

The David W. Carter Cowboys compete in the following sports:[13] The exploits of the football team, specifically the 1988 football team that won the 5A state title, was the subject of two films and they are mentioned at the end of the novel Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream, which was a chronicle of Permian High School that lost to Carter in the semifinals that year.[14] The Cowboys won 31-14 in the championship game over the Judson Rockets of Converse, before academic violations stripped the title from Carter and gave it to Judson. In addition to finishing as state semifinalist in 1971, 1974, 1982, and 1990, the team reached the playoffs in every year from 1990 to 2010.[15]

Feeder patterns[edit]

As of 2006, William H. Atwell and D. A. Hulcy Middle School feed into David W. Carter High School. [16]


Adelle Turner, Mark Twain Vanguard, and T. G. Terry Elementary Schools feed into William H. Atwell Middle School, and Birdie Alexander, Umphrey Lee, Ronald E. McNair, and Martin Weiss Elementary Schools feed into D. A. Hulcy Middle School, all of which ultimately feed into David W. Carter High School.[16]

(class of 1990): American and Canadian football player

Clifton Abraham

Actress known as Aisha Campbell the second yellow ranger in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers

Karan Ashley

(class of 1989): American football linebacker from 1993 to 2003 (New York Giants, Washington Redskins)

Jessie Armstead

(class of 1989): American football offensive and defensive lineman

Joe Burch

(born 1995), basketball player for Israeli team Hapoel Ramat Gan Givatayim

Jeremy Combs

(class of 2006): wide receiver for the Baltimore Ravens; first-team All-American for Texas Tech

Michael Crabtree

(class of 2006): NFL linebacker with the Baltimore Ravens since 2012[18]

Adrian Hamilton

(class of 1998): American football running back for the Dallas Cowboys

Ennis Haywood

(class of 1990): professional American football running back from 1994 to 1999

Greg Hill

(class of 1984): professional American football wide receiver in the NFL and CFL

Rod Harris

(class of 1987): American former professional football player in the early 1990s

Darren "Tank" Lewis

(class of 2006): American football offensive tackle for the Minnesota Vikings since 2011[19]

DeMarcus Love

(class of 1989): American football running back from 1993 to 1998

Le'Shai Maston

(class of 1981): actress in stage, television, and film and jazz singer; noted roles in the movie Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins and TV series Friday Night Lights[20]

Liz Mikel

(class of 2018): Track and field sprinter who as a freshman at Louisiana State University, ran the 100m in 10.75 seconds to break the World U20 record.

Sha'Carri Richardson

(transferred to Lincoln High School of San Diego): basketball player in the NBA from 1997 to 2002

Mark Sanford

(class of 1977): basketball player in the NBA and CBA from 1980 to 1986

DeWayne Scales

(class of 2001): American football offensive tackle

Jonathan Scott

(class of 1977): professional basketball player[21]

Vernon Smith

(class of 1986): Dallas County District Attorney since 2007; first African American to hold such office both county and statewide[22]

Craig Watkins

head football coach from 1982 to 1995

Freddie James

a movie based on Carter's 1988 football team.

Carter High

Official website