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James B. Dudley High School
Address

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1200 Lincoln St.
Greensboro, North Carolina, 27401
United States
Coordinates 36°03′36″N 79°45′52″W / 36.0600°N 79.7645°W / 36.0600; -79.7645
Information
School type Public
Founded 1929 (95 years ago) (1929)
School district Guilford County Schools
CEEB Code 341605
Enrollment 1,375 (2018–19)
Student to teacher ratio 15.24
Schedule type Block
Schedule Traditional (Late August–Early June)
Color(s) Blue and gold
        
Sports 15 varsity teams (7 male, 8 female)
Nickname Panthers
James Benson Dudley Senior High School and Gymnasium
James Benson Dudley Senior High School and Gymnasium (Greensboro, North Carolina) 1.jpg
James Benson Dudley Senior High School, September 2012
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Location 1200 Lincoln St., Greensboro, North Carolina
Area 3 acres (1.2 ha)
Built 1929 (1929), 1936, 1959
Architect Hartmann, Charles C.; et.al.
Architectural style Classical Revival, Late Gothic Revival
MPS Greensboro MPS
NRHP reference No. 03000302
Added to NRHP April 11, 2003

James Benson Dudley High School is located in Guilford County in the city of Greensboro, North Carolina. Dudley High School was founded in 1929 as the first black high school in Guilford County, in a school system segregated by law. The school was named for James Benson Dudley.

History

The high school building was designed by architect Charles C. Hartmann and built in 1929. James B. Dudley Senior High School is a three-story, U-shaped, brick building with Classical Revival and Collegiate Gothic design elements. It has a one-story slightly projecting entrance portico with Doric order columns (added in the mid-1970's), a stepped parapet, and crenellated stair towers. The gymnasium was attached in 1936. A separate brick gymnasium building was constructed in 1959.

James Benson Dudley Senior High School and Gymnasium was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

The school was central to the 1969 Greensboro uprising when school officials refused to recognize the validity of a write-in candidate for student council, allegedly due to his activism in the Black Power movement. In 1971 through desegregation, Dudley's student population integrated.

Today, the make-up of the school consists of a diverse student enrollment with a predominantly African-American population. Dudley has a traditional education program as well as the Dudley Science, Math, and Technology Academy magnet program. The Science, Math, and Technology Academy provide high-caliber students a strong college preparatory background, which emphasizes mathematics and science along with sufficient writing, research, and technological skills. During their senior year, Dudley Academy Students attend classes on college campuses. Dudley won 2 back-to-back football rings. The school colors are Blue and Gold. Dudley High School has an Advance Vehicle Technology(AVT) Team that competes in an international competition called the Shell Eco Marathon.

Notable alumni

  • Elreta Melton Alexander-Ralston (class of 1934), first African-American judge in North Carolina, first black woman to graduate from Columbia Law School
  • Tom Alston, first African-American Major League Baseball player for the St. Louis Cardinals
  • David Amerson (class of 2010), football player for Oakland Raiders
  • Clarence Avant, music executive, known as "Godfather of Black Music", left Dudley in junior year (1947)
  • Ezell A. Blair, Jr. (class of 1959), African American civil rights activist, one of Greensboro Four, graduated from Dudley High School
  • Joey Cheek (class of 1997), former speed skater and inline speed skater, gold medalist in men's 500 metres at 2006 Winter Olympics
  • King Virgil Cheek (class of 1955), former President of Shaw University and Morgan State University
  • Brett Claywell (class of 1996), actor, played Tim Smith on CW series One Tree Hill and Kyle Lewis on ABC soap opera One Life to Live
  • Jeff Davis, former NFL player, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1982–87 and Clemson, 1982 Orange Bowl champion; inducted into College Football Hall of Fame in 2007
  • Marques Douglas (class of 1995), former NFL player for San Francisco 49ers, attended Dudley High School
  • Beverly M. Earle (class of 1961), first black woman to represent Mecklenburg County in North Carolina House of Representatives
  • Clarence Grier (class of 1983), college basketball player
  • P. J. Hairston, North Carolina basketball player, transferred to Hargrave Military Academy for his senior year
  • Will Graves, Maccabi Haifa basketball player
  • Brendan Haywood (class of 1997), NBA player for Charlotte Bobcats, graduated from Dudley High School
  • Hendon Hooker (class of 2017), Detroit Lions quarterback
  • Lou Hudson (class of 1962), NBA player for St. Louis Hawks, 6-time All-Star, graduated from Dudley High School
  • Yvonne Johnson (class of 1960), first African-American mayor of Greensboro
  • Debra L. Lee (class of 1972), President and CEO of BET Holdings, Inc.
  • Joyce Martin Dixon (class of 1952), businesswoman and philanthropist
  • Jerry Gantt, former NFL and CFL player
  • Mac McCain (class of 2017), defensive back for the Detroit Lions
  • Emmanuel Moseley (class of 2014), defensive back for the Detroit Lions
  • Natalie Murdock, politician
  • Fred Neal (class of 1958), guard for demonstration basketball team Harlem Globetrotters and noted dribbler, attended Dudley High School
  • Kenny Okoro, football player
  • DeMario Pressley (class of 2004), former NFL defensive tackle, graduated from Dudley High School
  • Lynnae Quick (class of 2001), NASA scientist specializing in planetary geophysics and ocean worlds; first African American awarded the Harold C. Urey Prize; namesake for asteroid 37349Lynnaequick
  • David L. Richmond (class of 1959), civil rights activist, one of Greensboro Four, graduated from Dudley High School
  • Charlie Sanders (class of 1964), 2007 inductee into Pro Football Hall of Fame, tight end for Detroit Lions, attended Dudley High School
  • Jessie Carney Smith, librarian and educator
  • George Simkins, Jr. (class of 1940), civil rights activist, NAACP president
  • Barbara Weathers (class of 1981), soul singer (with Atlantic Starr)

Notable faculty

  • Nelle A. Coley, famed educator and civil rights activist, taught English at James B. Dudley High School for over thirty years.

See also

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