Clarkston High School used to be in Clarkston, Michigan. The third Clarkston School was built in 1910 on Main Street (M-15).
By the time the fourth Clarkston School was completed in 1930 in Independence Township, the area's population had started to decline. After World War II, Independence Township's population began to boom. In 1952, Clarkston Community Schools was formed and Clarkston and Andersonville Elementary Schools were completed, leaving the 6th-to-12th graders as sole occupants at the newly renamed Clarkston High School. Expansions were made in the mid-1950s. By the end of the decade the building could not be expanded anymore, and in 1960, the fifth Clarkston High School was built across the street (although its official address was 6595 Middle Lake Road). The 1930 building became Clarkston Junior High.
The 1960 building remained unchanged until major renovations were made in 1993 when freshmen were allowed to attend the school for the first time since 1969. Unfortunately the renovations were not enough to handle nearly 2,000 students, and in 1998 the current building was opened. The 1960 building would be refitted as Clarkston Middle School until 2005, when it underwent renovations and became Clarkston Junior High, which hosts grades eight and nine. That same year, Sashabaw Middle School, which hosted students from the eastern half of the district, was renovated and now holds only grades six and seven.
In November 2022, a school bond proposal of around $197,500,000 USD was approved for district-wide improvements. This included improvements of security systems, a new junior high and a replacement of an aging building system.[3] As of 2024, the new junior high school plans are still being reviewed and work has not started. [4]
Clarkston Wolves won the Division 1 Football State Championship in 2013.[5] Clarkston repeated as Division 1 Football State Champions the next year in 2014.[6] The Wolves also won the 2017 MHSAA Football state championship for their third football state championship in five years. That same year, the Wolves basketball team won their first Class A State Championship under head coach Dan Fife.[7] In 2018, the Wolves repeated as State Champions with an 81-38 victory over Holland West Ottawa. The leading scorer of that game, Foster Loyer, won the 2018 Hal Schram Mr. Basketball Award.[8] Dan Fife retired later that year as the third-winningest head coach in state history after 36 seasons, with a career coaching record of 703-170.[9]
Sports offered
Baseball
Boys Basketball
Girls Basketball
Boys Lacrosse
Boys Bowling
Girls Bowling
Competitive Cheer
Competitive Dance
Football
Girls Field Hockey
Boys Golf
Girls Golf
Girls Lacrosse
Boys Ice Hockey
Softball
Boys Skiing
Boys Soccer
Girls Soccer
Boys Swimming and Diving
Girls Swimming and Diving
Boys Tennis
Girls Tennis
Boys Track and Field
Girls Track and Field
Girls Volleyball
Boys Volleyball
Wrestling
Boys Cross Country
Girls Cross Country
Notable alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(February 2020)