Killingly High School

Killingly High School is a public high school in Killingly, Connecticut. The school reported 792 students and 65 FTE classroom teachers for the 2014–2015 school year. Killingly High is the only public high school in the Killingly School District, which is on the eastern edge of Windham County. It also serves the nearby town of Brooklyn.

For 2015, the community voted to make the school the sole polling place in Killingly. The Secretary of State informed the town registrar's office that this was a misinterpretation of statute, and in 2016, a second polling place was opened at the school's old location.

Sports at the school are done as part of the Eastern Connecticut Conference.

Killingly High was included in a segment of the reality TV series The Principal's Office in 2009.

Old Killingly High School was built in 1908 and used by the school until 1965. The second building was then used until 2010 and continues to act as the site of an alternative learning program and the school district's central office. The first building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992 and is now the town's community center.

Mascot controversies
In 2014 school officials began discussing changing the school's mascot name, The Redmen, in response to controversy over Native American mascots.

In 2019, another student group advocated for a name change and brought the issue back into the news. The school board voting to change the name to "Red Hawks", which was selected as the new mascot by 80% of students in an October, 2019 vote. An effort to restore the name Redmen was supported by the Native American Guardians Association (a controversial non-profit funded by the Washington Redskins Original Americans Foundation) which gave lectures on the origin of the name. On January 9, 2020, the board voted to reinstate the name "Redmen" with an updated logo to reduce negative stereotypes. The reinstatement drew national attention to the school. Connecticut State Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowicz called the reinstatement a "mockery of the process" and announced plans to ban the use of such mascots at the legislative level, following a precedent first set by Maine and followed by other states.

Notable alumni

 * Bruce Boisclair, New York Mets outfielder
 * Shane Gibson, professional basketball player
 * Eric Laakso, Miami Dolphins professional football player (NFL)