Cheltenham High School
Cheltenham High School is a public high school in the Wyncote neighborhood of Cheltenham Township, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, located from the border of the city of Philadelphia and from Center City. Serving grades 9 through 12, Cheltenham is the only high school in the School District of Cheltenham Township. It is fed by Cedarbrook Middle School, the only school in the school district for grades 7 and 8.
In 2017–18 the student ethnicity was distributed as follows: 54% Black, 31% White, 8% Asian, and 5% Hispanic. The school has approximately 1400 students in grades 9 through 12, with a student-teacher ratio of about 12:1.
Cheltenham's athletic teams are known as the Cheltenham Panthers and are members of the PIAA District 1 in the American Conference of the Suburban One League. They have a long-standing tradition of holding a Thanksgiving Day football game against their cross-town rival, Abington Senior High School. The rivalry celebrated its 100th year in 2015.
History
19th century
Cheltenham High School was established in 1884 and is one of the oldest public high schools in Pennsylvania.20th century
The first location was on Ashbourne Road, and at the time of its closing in 1953, it was considered the oldest public school site in continuous use. The next building was at High School Road and Montgomery Avenue in Elkins Park.Present-day Cheltenham High School, located at 500 Rices Mill Road in Wyncote, was built in 1959. It sits on a land area of approximately 47 acres, and is bound by Route 309, Route 152, Panther Road, Rices Mill Road, Carlton Avenue, and Old Mill Road.
21st century
In 2004, the school adopted a stricter dress code because the administration felt that clothing that was too loose could hide identity badges and make identifying occupants more difficult.Extracurriculars
Cheltenham Township School District offers a wide variety of clubs, activities and an extensive sports program.Athletics
CHS is a member of the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association and in the Suburban One American Conference. It was one of the founding members of the SOL in 1922, and is one of 4 of the remaining original schools. Cheltenham Athletics promote sportsmanship above self, and therefore, consistently receive the SOL Sportsmanship Award. Cheltenham has teams in the following sports: ''Asterisk designates available to both boys and girls.''Fall sports
- Cross country running*
- Boys football
- Soccer*
- Color Guard*
- Girls tennis
- Girls volleyball
- Coed cheerleading
- Coed field hockey
- Coed unified cheer
Winter sports
- Basketball *
- Color Guard*
- Indoor Track*
- Swimming/Diving *
- Boys wrestling
Spring sports
- Boys baseball
- Boys tennis
- Track & field
- Cross country
- Color Guard*
- Boys volleyball
- Coed unified track
- Lacrosse
- Girls softball
Girls Basketball Team
Girls Track and Field
The Cheltenham Girls Track and Field Team has won six state championships. They have won four indoor PTFCA indoor state championships and two outdoor PIAA State Championships. They have also won seven PIAA District 1 championshipsCheltenham–Abington rivalry
The Cheltenham–Abington rivalry, also known as "The Turkey Bowl", is a football game played between the Cheltenham Panthers and the Abington Galloping Ghosts. It has been played annually on Thanksgiving Day since 1915, unless one of the teams has conflicts with PIAA playoffs. The rivalry is the fifth-oldest public high school rivalry in Pennsylvania, and the seventh-oldest including private schools. The schools are less than 2 miles apart. Despite not being in the same conference, the rivalry is prevalent in other sports, mainly basketball. In some sports, the teams do not play each other at all. Abington leads the overall series 55–34-6.Notable alumni
The Cheltenham High School Hall of Fame was established to "acknowledge the achievements of our alma mater's most remarkable graduates". The first class was in 1981, and have had inductions in 1984, 1987, 1993, 1996, 1999, and 2002. Hall of Fame inductees have a HoF next to their name.- Michael Baylson, '57, Federal judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania HoF
- Brandon Bing, '07, former college football player, Rutgers
- Michael Brecker, '67, Grammy Award-winning jazz musician HoF
- Randy Brecker, '63, Grammy Award-winning jazz musician HoF
- Michael Stuart Brown '58, 1985 Nobel Prize in Medicine recipient HoF
- Ilene Chaiken, TV director, producer, and writer
- Laurie Colwin, '62, author and columnist HoF
- Wesley E. Craig, '64, US Army major general
- Rebecca Creskoff, '88, actress
- Tom Feeney, Member of Congress, R-FL
- Stuart F. Feldman, '54, co-founder of Vietnam Veterans of America
- Glenn A. Fine, United States [Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General|Inspector General], U.S. Department of Justice HoF
- Wilmot E. Fleming, '35, State Senator HoF
- Jon D. Fox, '65, U.S. Congressman HoF
- Patricia Greenspan, '62, philosopher
- Robert Greenstein, '63, founder and president, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities HoF
- Laura Harper, '04, professional basketball player
- Trina Schart Hyman, '56, artist and illustrator HoF
- Reggie Jackson, '64, professional baseball player HoF
- Maxine Kumin '42, poet and novelist HoF
- Mark Levin, '75, conservative talk radio host
- Richard Levinson, '52, Emmy Award-winning writer and producer HoF
- Chad Levitt, '93, NFL football player
- Franz Lidz, '69, journalist, The New York Times and Sports Illustrated, memoirist, NBA executive
- Lil Dicky, '06, rapper
- William Link, '52, Emmy Award-Winning writer and producer HoF
- Craig Littlepage, '69, college administrator and educator HoF
- Jeff Lorber, '70, musician HoF'
- Mary Ellen Mark, '58, photojournalist HoF
- Chris Myarick, '14, professional football player, Miami Dolphins and New York Giants
- Robert J. Myers, '29, co-creator, U.S. Social Security program HoF
- Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, '67, Prime Minister of Israel HoF
- Yonatan "Yoni" Netanyahu, '64, Israeli military officer HoF
- Ronald Perelman, '60, philanthropist
- David Saxon, '37, physicist, educator, and administrator HoF
- Norma Shapiro, '45, U.S. District Court judge HoF
- Ronald M. Shapiro, '60, sports agent, corporate attorney, and author HoF
- Robert C. Solomon, '60, philosopher HoF
- Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, academic administrator and professor, Yale School of Management
- Jonathan E. Steinberg, television producer, screenwriter, and director
- Dan Trachtenberg, '99, filmmaker
- Wallace Triplett, '45, professional football player HoF
- Kate Vrijmoet, '84, artist
- Chris Williams, '02, professional soccer player, Miami FC
Notable faculty
- Paul Westhead Former Cheltenham Boys Basketball Coach, Oregon Ducks women's basketball coach; also coached the Los Angeles Lakers, Chicago Bulls, Denver Nuggets, and La Salle Explorers, among others.