Hudson Independent School District

Hudson Independent School District
Location
Hudson, TX
ESC Region 7[1]
USA
District information
Type Public Independent school district
Grades EE through 12[1]
Superintendent Mary Ann Whiteker[1]
Schools 5 (2011-12)[2]
District ID 4823790[2]
Students and staff
Students 2726 (2012-13)[1]
Teachers 175.55 (2011-12)[2] (on full-time equivalent (FTE) basis)
Student-teacher ratio 15.47 (2011-12)[2]
Athletic conference UIL Class AAAA (non-football participant)
Colors maroon and white
Other information
Mascot hornet
Website Hudson ISD

Hudson Independent School District is a public school district based in Hudson, Texas (USA).

In 2009, the school district was rated "recognized" by the Texas Education Agency.[3]

History

The current Hudson school began as the traditional "one-room schoolhouse" in 1880. After several moves, it relocated to its current location in 1928.

That same year, the Hudson, Narroway, and Bethlehem districts voted to consolidate into the Hudson Consolidated Common School District, and the Chancy Switch district was later annexed into the district that same year.

In 1930 the Providence, Peavy Switch, and Happy Hour districts voted to consolidate into the Hudson district.

In 1940, Hudson became an independent school district, adopting its present name.

The school has a unique relationship with the nearby Apple Springs Independent School District. Apple Springs participates in six-man football but does not offer a band program, while Hudson has a band but does not participate in football. Therefore, the Hudson band participates at Apple Springs games. The unusual relationship was filmed by the crew of the popular Texas Country Reporter. The television show aired on November 16, 2008. Additional sports offered include soccer, cross country, basketball, track, golf, softball, baseball, and volleyball (for special olympics only).

Schools

In the 2012-2013 school year, the district had students in five schools.[1]

High schools
Middle schools
Elementary schools
Alternative schools

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.