Pinecrest High School
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Pinecrest High School | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
![]() | |
250 Voit Gilmore Lane 28387 United States | |
| Coordinates | 35°11′17″N 79°26′02″W / 35.1879351°N 79.4339209°W |
| Information | |
| Type | Public 4-year |
| Established | 1969 |
| CEEB code | 343670 |
| Principal | Matthew McLean |
| Faculty | 106.73 (FTE)[1] |
| Enrollment | 2,310 (2023-2024)[1] |
| Student to teacher ratio | 21.64[1] |
| Colors | Green and gold |
| Athletics conference | NCHSAA |
| Mascot | Patriots |
| Newspaper | The Patriot |
| Yearbook | Spectrum |
| Website | pchs |
Pinecrest High School (PHS) is a high school located in Southern Pines, North Carolina, United States, built in 1969. It is one of three high schools in the Moore County School District.
Pinecrest High School is ranked 105th within North Carolina.[clarification needed][2] Students are able to take Advanced Placement coursework and exams; the AP participation rate is 40%. The total minority enrollment is 38% and 24% of students are economically disadvantaged..
Pinecrest High School opened in 1969,[3] following the consolidation of seven high schools in southern Moore County and the merger of three administrative school units.
On September 3, 1969, Pinecrest opened to its initial intake of around 1,600 students. Rather than the traditional six-period day, their schedules were divided into 21 blocks called mods.[4]
When the school opened, its physical plant consisted of three two-story classroom buildings. In the spring of 1974, the music program moved into the newly completed music building. In the fall of 1974, Pinecrest played its first homecoming game on its own athletic field. A new gymnasium was opened in 1975. The school finished construction of the major facilities on February 15, 1976. In addition to the classroom building, a music building, a cafeteria, a gymnasium and a football field, the plant included a baseball field, tennis courts, a student common building, and paved parking areas.[citation needed]
Pinecrest offered an IB Diploma track until 2009, when the program was cancelled due to budgetary concerns and lack of student interest.[5]
On March 14, 2020, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper closed all schools March 16 through May 16 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[6] On April 25, he closed all schools for the rest of the school year.[7] In June 2020, he announced a plan for all students to go back to school, around half on Monday and Tuesday, and the other half on Thursday and Friday, while Wednesday was used to sanitize. On March 12, 2021, Moore County Schools announced resumption of five-day-a-week classes.[8]
Campus
Pinecrest is composed of nine buildings. Pinecrest's buildings 1–3 are the original buildings that were built in 1969. Building 4 is a more recent building that connects with the cafeteria and gym. Building 9 is the newest building, completed before the second semester of the 2006–07 school year. Pinecrest has a gymnasium along with a field house that houses the Home and Visitors locker rooms for its athletic teams. The Butler building houses a room for PC's Exceptional Education program. The R.E. Lee Auditorium is located on the west side of the school and houses the school's music ensembles.[9]
The Patriot
The Patriot, Pinecrest's school paper, was published from the school's founding in 1969 until 2016.[10]

