The Hudson City School District is a school district in Ohio, covering most of Hudson and Boston Heights, and parts of Boston Township and Cuyahoga Falls.[1] The high-school is ranked #460 in the nation, by U.S. News & World Report, as of 2021.

Hudson Elementary, a former school building in the Hudson City School District

Board of Education

edit

Current members

edit
  • Steve DiMauro (President)
  • Alisa Wright (Vice President)
  • Tom Tobin
  • Laura Jones
  • Mark Dzurec

Administration

edit
  • Dana Addis (Superintendent)
  • Doreen Osmun (Assistant Superintendent)
  • Phillip Butto (Treasurer)
  • Tom Barone (Business Manager)
  • Kelly Kempf (Pupil Services)
  • Lisa Hunt (Human Resources)
  • Jennifer Reece (Communications Manager)

Changes in Hudson City School District

edit
  • 1919: Hudson Township Rural School District is formed, consisting of the former Hudson Village School District and the township school districts.
  • 1998: Hudson Local School District became Hudson City School District.
  • 2010: Hudson Elementary is demolished.
  • 2018–2022: The Administration and Board of Education begin making changes to multiple schools and facilitates around the Hudson City School District.[2]

Schools

edit
  • Hudson High School, 2500 Hudson-Aurora Road
    • Principal: Mike Miller
  • Hudson Middle School, 83 North Oviatt Street
    • Principal: Kimberly Cockley
  • East Woods Intermediate School, 120 North Hayden Parkway
    • Principal: Natalie Wininger
  • Ellsworth Hill Elementary, 7750 Stow Rd
    • Principal: Jen Filomeana
  • McDowell Early Learning School, 280 North Hayden Parkway
    • Principal: Beth Trivelli

Previous locations

edit
  • Hudson Elementary, 34 North Oviatt Street (torn down in 2010)
    • Last Principal: Mark Leventhal
  • Evamere Elementary, 76 North Hayden Parkway (closed in 2021)
    • Last Principal: Beth Trivelli

Other facilities

edit
  • Al Statts Transportation Facility and Koberna Salt Storage Facility opened in June 2019. Is a bus garage and salt storage facility.[3]
  • Lavelli Stadium, built in 1972, named in 1975, when 1941 Hudson High School graduate Dante Lavelli was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
  • Memorial Stadium, has been built on Hudson High School (Ohio) property beside the W-wing faculty parking lot.
  • Ada Cooper Miller Natatorium, attached to East Woods Elementary. Ada Cooper Miller served on the Hudson Board of Education for 40 years, and presided for 25 of those years.

Previous locations

edit
  • Petermann Limited, 91 Owen Brown Street (closed)

District Enrollment Figures (K-12)[4]

edit
1965[5] 1970[6] 1974-75[7] 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2019 2020 2023
2,429 2,983 3,553 3,721  3,514  3,880  5,154 5,049 5,421 4,866 4,476 4,517 4,532 4,501

References

edit
  1. ^ http://www.hudson.edu/frames.php?school=hcsd&url=http://www.hudson.edu/hcsd/info/HCSDboundaries.pdf Map of Hudson City School District boundaries
  2. ^ https://www.hudson.k12.oh.us/cms/lib/OH01914911/Centricity/Domain/1498/Construction%20timeline%20chart%20MFP.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ "City of Hudson, Ohio - Government". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2019-05-23.
  4. ^ "Ohio Department of Education – Enrollment Data". Retrieved June 10, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Issue 1 Becomes Battle of Figures: Here's Breakdown". Akron Beacon Journal. October 9, 1965. pp. A12.
  6. ^ "Pupil Count". Akron Beacon Journal. September 12, 1970. pp. B1.
  7. ^ "Student Tally by District". Akron Beacon Journal. November 15, 1974. pp. B1.
edit