Cherokee High School Opens Its Doors: Community Invited to Ribbon Cutting and Open House April 28
Woodstock Community News Staff··1 min read

The new Warriors campus on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. opens its doors to the public months before students arrive for the fall semester
The Cherokee County School District is inviting the entire community to get a first look at the new Cherokee High School building during a ribbon cutting ceremony and open house on Tuesday, April 28, in Canton.
Details on the event schedule and exact address had not been confirmed at press time — residents should check the Cherokee County School District's website or social media channels for the latest information as the date approaches.
What is confirmed: the celebration is open to the entire community, no invitation required, and the new building is set to welcome students for the first day of classes this August.
Cherokee High School, home of the Warriors, has long been one of the anchor institutions of Canton — the kind of school whose football games, graduation ceremonies, and academic achievements have marked the rhythm of community life for generations. The new building is more than a construction project. It is the county's answer to two decades of relentless growth that has reshaped Cherokee from a quiet foothills community into one of the fastest-expanding counties in Georgia.
That growth has placed sustained pressure on school facilities across the district. Cherokee County School District serves tens of thousands of students, and keeping pace with enrollment demands has required ongoing investment in buildings, staff, and infrastructure. A purpose-built high school — designed from the ground up rather than expanded or patched — represents a meaningful step forward.
For families with students currently enrolled at Cherokee High School, the open house is a practical opportunity: walk the hallways, find the classrooms, and get a feel for the layout before August arrives and the first-day chaos begins. For longtime Canton residents and Warriors alumni, it is something else — a chance to see how a school that shaped them has grown, while still planting its roots in the same community.
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