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History > Where History Happened > Schools > Sherwood
| SCHOOLS: SHERWOOD |
Nearly a century of Sandy Springers--teens, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents--hold diplomas from Sherwood High School. During those many decades, successive structures have been built, demolished, and replaced by bigger schools to accommodate ever climbing enrollments.
Founded as the Quaker Sherwood Academy in 1883, Sherwood became public in 1906 and at first taught only 11 grades, and only whites. The student body numbered 127 in 1909 when diplomas went to the first graduating class of two: Ruth Shoemaker and Dorothy Wetherald. By chance or by design, Sherwood's historical pupil boundaries generally matched those of Sandy Spring itself: north to Triadelphia, east to Burtonsville, south to Colesville, west to Norbeck. Until Brown vs. Board of Education forced integration in the 1950s, black students attended small community elementaries, then traveled by bus to Lincoln High in Rockville.
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Sherwood of about 1915 looms over the student body. The building was erected in 1908, two years after the transition of Sherwood from Quaker to county school. The structure was enlarged with successive additions to the rear before being razed for the next of several generations of ever-newer Sherwoods. |
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| War clouds were gathering when the Sherwood class of 1937 graduated, and many were soon in uniform. 'Thirty-seven marked the year that Sherwood advanced from an eleven-year school to twelve years, and thus the graduates attended for two "senior" years. |
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Girls' tennis flourished at youthful Sherwood High of 1910. The players are, front row from left: Polly Janney (Shields), Lydia Chichester (Laird), and Katherine Nichols; second row, Deb Iddings (Willson), Barbara Miller, Irene Kimler (Miller), Helen Barnes, Annie Miller, Edith Shoemaker; third row, Gladys Brooke (Tumbleson), Lydia Tatum, Anna Snowden (Bussler), and Henrietta Waters. |
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The winning girls' basketball team of '52 continued a victorious tradition: "During the past three years the team has lost only six games," a contemporary Times Herald article observed. From left: Robin Ann Adair, Caroline Kricker, Barbara Ann Cashell, Jean Rebecca Bryan, Joan Elizabeth Toms, Julia E. Weaver, B. Rivers, and Jocelyn S. Johns. Coach Virginia Brown's 1952 stars compiled an enviable 10-4 record. |
| Tournament bound, the 1944-45 girls' basketball team won all but one of its games. They met their match at the Washington Star Tournament, but team captain Ruth Link won the award for Outstanding Player. From left, front: Patsy Pierson, Vertrees Canby, Ruth Link, Diane Cashell, and Ann Farquhar; behind: Nola Lewis, Marion Auld, Peggy Crosley, Pat Berlage, coach Margaret Lansdale Pue, and Kitty Carr. Evelyn Baker, Helen Federline, and Ruth Seibel played in the tournament but missed the picture. |
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| County champs! The 1935 boys' basketball team, captained by Dick Lansdale, swept all before it. Front row, from left: Harry Fraley, Lansdale, Dan Ligon, John Bonifant, and Harry Musgrove; back row, Coach Jimmy Cross, Ted Beall, George Craver, Randolph Bready, Bill Muncaster, Norman Farquhar, and score keeper Tom Lansdale. |
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| Sherwood's first tackle football team, fielded in 1944, smiles despite a disastrous initial season. Coached by math teacher Dwight Hurley, left, they are, front row from left: Mike Conner, Jimmy Frenzel, Willard Derrick, Fred Fry, Tom Benson, Calvert Heil, Keith Himebaugh, and Charlie Morris; second row, William Miller, Kyle Cantwell, John Johns, Robert Franklin, Sonny Johns, Louis Bussler, and Arthur Brigham; back row, Dick Kimmel, Pete Black, and David Haviland. |
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