Woodstock Union High School was established in 1854 and is located in Woodstock, Vermont.Located on Woodstock Union High School's campus, the Union Arena Community Center serves as the home ice for Woodstock's boys and girls high school ice hockey teams.
Woodstock's first public high school opened January 16, 1854. This opening was less than a year after the town, at its annual meeting, had voted to build the school. The land, purchased in April 1853, was on a knoll below Linden Hill. The current high school, built in 1957, sits on approximately 40 acres (16ha) of land along the Ottauquechee River just west of the village of West Woodstock on U.S. Route 4. In 2023 school and community members proposed that a new school building be built.[2] On 2026 Town Meeting day, 61% of voters approved a $112 million bond issue to support the building of a new school.[3]
Woodstock Union High School is consistently recognized for its educational quality and in 2020 was listed by U.S. News & World Report as the third best school in the state.[4] In 2025, Woodstock Union Middle School was named a "School of Distinction" by the Association for Middle Level Education. It was one of only 24 schools recognized nationwide "for their outstanding commitment to young adolescent education."[5] 2025 graduates attended schools including Dartmouth, West Point, and Yale.[6]
Following the 2025 passage of Vermont Act 73, Mountain Views Board of Directors Chair Keri Bristow recommended that WUHS serve as a regional hub district. In a July 28, 2025 letter to community members, Bristow cited the school's strengths in offering AP courses as well as programming in the visual and performing arts, music, STEM, trade-career preparation, and CRAFT - Community and Climate Resilience through Agriculture, Forestry and Technology.[7]
The high school has 10 academic departments: computer science, CRAFT, English, mathematics, modern & classical languages, music, science, social studies, visual and performing arts, and wellness.[8]
The interdisciplinary CRAFT program was introduced in 2023 to provide students with an ability to focus on environmental and sustainability themes. Classes in the program include foundations of agriculture, and economics and the environment.
There is a full-year high school band course, and a course in digital music production.
In 2018 the school opened a new Innovation Studio dedicated to "navigating the messiness of the creative process, from inception to completion," according to the 2018-2019 curriculum guide.[9] In the studio in the fall of 2018, students partnered with peers in Turkey to design a playground. Teachers at Woodstock partner with staff at NuVu Innovation School in Cambridge, Mass., to operate the NuVu studio.[10]
The school athletic programs fall into the Vermont Principals' Association Division II and Division III for all sports with the exception of Division I boys lacrosse. Woodstock athletics include:
fall: cross country, field hockey, football, golf, mountain biking, boys and girls soccer
winter: alpine skiing, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls ice hockey, boys and girls Nordic skiing, boys and girls snowboard
As of September 2025, 91 athletic championship banners were displayed in the Woodstock Union High School gymnasium.
spring: baseball, boys and girls lacrosse, softball, boys and girls tennis, track and field
The WUHS theatre program typically offers five different productions a year that involve high school and middle school students, teachers, and community members. Yoh's 2024 - 2025 performances included Front by Robert Caisley, Head Over Heals by Jeff Whitty, and As You Like It by William Shakespeare.[21]
Teachers including Harriet Y. Worrell and Marcia Bender helped establish the culture of Yoh. Worrell introduced the Speakchorus, which students continue to perform in Woodstock's annual commencement ceremony.
In August 2025 members of the Yoh theater traveled to Scotland to participate in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. They performed Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind: 30 plays in 60 minutes by Greg Allen.
Direct student leadership opportunities at WUHS consist of student government and student council. Each class has a president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer, as well as representatives on student council. Traditionally, two seniors serve as student representatives on the School Board.
Clubs at WUHS are advised by one or more faculty members. Organizations in 2024 - 2025 included Catan club, chess club, computer team, corner dwellers creative writing club, earth beat, French club, Future Farmers of America, gaming (D&D), math team, outing club, queer straight alliance, safe school ambassadors, scholars bowl, social action club, Spanish club, VTLSP/OVX, YADB book club, yearbook club.
Woodstock graduates attend 4-year and 2-year colleges, begin trade apprenticeships, and enter the workforce. Graduates attend selective institutions including in the Ivy League, NESCAC, and Liberty League. The most common college for Woodstock graduates to attend is the University of Vermont.[22]
There is an active WUHS Alumni Association that hosts events in Woodstock. Traditionally, alumni representing the 50 year reunion class attend Commencement, and the association organizes a parade on the Saturday following graduation. [23]
Keegan Bradley is an American professional golfer on the PGA Tour. He won the 2011 PGA Championship and was named the 2025 Team USA Ryder Cup captain.[25] He attended Woodstock Union High School through his junior year.