Fine arts The Hickman High School Marching Band is one element of a comprehensive band program. The
marching band begins practicing in July with summer music rehearsals and concludes its season with the end of the football season. The marching band comprises 160 students enrolled in band classes at Hickman High School as well as several Hickman students that are members of the
color guard. As the marching band "activity" continues to evolve, the Hickman band remains active as it consistently participates in performances at home football games, local parades, and region-wide marching festivals. Throughout its recent history of participation in marching band festivals, the band has been a consistent finalist and has been awarded outstanding caption recognition in all captions, including Outstanding Musical Performance, Outstanding Visual Performance, Outstanding Percussion, Outstanding Color Guard, Outstanding Drum Majors, and Outstanding Soloist. Most recently, the band placed 2nd overall at the Fort Zumwalt North River City Marching Festival. The Hickman Marching Band has traveled to Florida and most recently to Honolulu, Hawaii (June, 2005) as they presented performances in the
King Kamehameha Parade and a special performance at the Memorial. The band repeated this trip in June 2008 and in June 2011. The Hickman High School Concert Band Program currently consists of Wind Ensemble (1st hour, A Day), Symphonic Winds (4th Hour, B Day), Symphonic Winds (3rd Hour, B Day), and Concert Band (3rd hour, A Day). Each year, the Wind Ensemble (membership by individual audition) and the Concert Bands present many performances for the community including home concerts and special events; in addition, the combined bands participate in the State Large Ensemble Festival and consistently receive Superior ratings. The Hickman High School Wind Ensemble has been selected to perform for the Missouri Music Educators Association four times(2001, 2005, 2022, and 2025). The Hickman High School Jazz Program is an extracurricular activity available to student enrolled in Hickman band classes. The jazz program comprises one "big band" of standard jazz instrumentation as well as 2 jazz “labs” consisting of any instrument. The jazz bands begin morning rehearsals at the conclusion of the marching band season and continue throughout the school year. Both jazz bands present 2 concerts per year, as well as participating in 3–4 jazz festivals per year. The Hickman High School
string orchestra is composed of the finest string players in the school and meets 1st hour. The band and string programs complement each other, combining into a full orchestra for major works such as
Carmina Burana, Verdi's Requiem, and tribute concerts for composers such as
Leonard Bernstein. In 2007, the orchestra traveled to
San Antonio, Texas to perform at the Heritage Music Festival. They received 3 first-place awards. Choral Music at Hickman has been a part of the total education experience since the first choral music class was included in the curriculum of Columbia High School for the 1899–1900 school year. Since then, choirs at Hickman have received numerous accolades and awards for excellence in choral performance at state, regional, national, and international festivals. These include a first-place finish at the International Youth and Music festival,
Vienna, Austria, a performance with the internationally renowned
Canadian Brass, a performance with former Missouri Governor, Senator, and U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft, and performances at state and regional music educator conferences. Hickman choirs have toured extensively throughout Europe, visiting Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Spain, Ireland, Wales,
Scotland, England, and most recently, Italy and the Vatican. Notable performances include: Salzburger Dom in
Salzburg, Austria;
Notre Dame Basilica in
Montreal, Canada; the
National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.;
St. Mark's Basilica in
Venice, Italy;
St. Francis Basilica in
Assisi, Italy; and
St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican City. Musical theatre has been a staple of Hickman High School for decades, having produced All-School musicals as far back as the 1940s. The musical productions class first appeared with the
Victor Herbert musical
The Red Mill, which opened as it had in 1946 when Hickman first produced it. Since that time, Musical Productions has grown into a graduated program, with three levels of study. Each course is designed to improve the student's skill level and grow students into confident and well-rounded performers.
Athletics Football Football at Columbia High School, Hickman's predecessor, started in 1894. With the exception of the
Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918, it appears football has been played every year at Columbia Hickman High School since that initial 1894 year. The Hickman Kewpie football team has won the
Class 6 MSHSAA title twice, in 1974 and 2004.
Providence Bowl The Hickman-
Rock Bridge series is called the Providence Bowl in reference to Providence Road, a major north–south street in Columbia that connects the two schools. The Providence Bowl meeting had taken place at the
University of Missouri's
Faurot Field from 2004 to 2012, but due to scheduling issues, moved to the schools' fields starting in 2013. Since 2004, Rock Bridge leads the series 18–6. Arguably the biggest meeting in the series was in the 2012 playoffs, when Hickman defeated Rock Bridge at home 10-7 in overtime.
Jefferson City - Hickman Rivalry Hickman has played
Jefferson City at least once a year in football since 1919, with the series starting in 1911. As of 2023, Jefferson City leads the series 62–53–4. This rivalry is the second oldest football rivalry west of the
Mississippi River.
Other Sports The first state wrestling tournament for high school wrestlers in the state of Missouri was held in 1931 at the Rothwell gym on the University of Missouri campus. Hickman High School competed in this first tournament under the instruction of Coach Fowler Young. Young was also a varsity wrestler for the MU Tigers at the same time he coached the Hickman team. This first Hickman team became the first wrestling team to be crowned State Champs. Coach Fowler coached the team in 1932 and 1933. The team placed 2nd and 8th respectively. The first
lacrosse program in the Columbia area was started in 1998 and was composed of players from Hickman High School and Rock Bridge High School. The schools split ways in 2002, and the first Hickman High School men's lacrosse team was formed. After graduation, many players went on to play for the University of Missouri Club team; however, after graduating in 2006, W. Kendall Eckles went on to become the first to play NCAA. He played his 2007 season at Fontbonne University in
St. Louis, Missouri where he led the team as the leading point scorer.
Academy of Rock Hickman High School boasts one of the most innovative music appreciation societies in United States public education. The Academy of Rock was founded in late January 2004 by students David Kemper, Dylan Raithel, James Saracini and teacher Phil Overeem. The general purpose of the club was initially to plan and execute a “Battle of the Bands” between Hickman and its Columbia rival, Rock Bridge, but soon grew to encompass several other enterprises. Since its inception, the Academy of Rock has hosted nine Battles of the Bands, three at Hickman High School and two at a local rock-and-roll venue, The Blue Note. These four events raised a total of nearly $7,000 to support what sponsor Overeem calls “demotic music” (in other words, music created by and for the masses). Each Battle has pitted four Hickman bands against four Rock Bridge bands, the winners being as follows: J Murda and the Musicians (Hickman, 2004), The Tipper Gores (Hickman, 2005), Wayfare (Rock Bridge, 2006), Graffiti Out Loud (Hickman, 2007), and Molly Trull and Anodyne (Hickman, 2008), the Dorians (Hickman, 2010), the RPs (Hickman, 2011), Table for Five (Hickman/Rock Bridge, 2012), and The IRA (Hickman, 2013). The winning band not only has the privilege of hosting a summer benefit concert at the Blue Note but being staked to recording time in a local studio owned and operated by local Columbia musician Barry Hibdon, Red Boots. The four summer benefits have raised a total of over $3,000 for
VH1's Save the Music Foundation, Columbia's community radio station
KOPN, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the Voluntary Action Center of Columbia, the University of Missouri's Thompson Center for Autism and Other Neurodevelopmental Disorders, and the effort to rebuild
Joplin, Missouri, after the
2011 tornado. In addition, Academy of Rock-sponsored bands have also raised over $2,000 to assist in rebuilding after both the
Sri Lanka and
New Orleans disasters, and the group co-sponsored a fund-raiser for
Hurricane Katrina survivors that netted nearly $27,000. In 2013, The IRA, the winning band in that year's Battle, opted to donate its recording proceeds to the Central Missouri Humane Society. Besides the Battle of the Bands, the Academy of Rock also sponsors, mans, and programs KWPE 98.3 FM, the school radio station (home to Rock Therapy); curates the American Roots Music Listening Library in the school media center, which has been funded largely by the Assistance League of Mid-Missouri; partners with Columbia art theater
Ragtag Cinemacafe for “The Academy of Rock Showcase,” which gives high school bands the opportunity to hone their chops in front of audiences and make money; partners with University of Missouri radio station
KCOU in a “Take-over Program", during which eight pairs of Hickman DJs operate the college station for 12 to 16 hours in one- to two-hour shifts; sponsors a monthly music documentary series in the school's Little Theatre; and coordinates a live performance series that has featured free unplugged concerts by artists ranging from nationally known acts like
The Drive-By Truckers (March 2005) and
The Hold Steady (December 2006) to cult artists like former X co-lead singer-songwriter
Exene Cervenka (see video),and
Baby Gramps to local Missouri musicians like Witch's Hat, The F-Bombs, Bockman, and
Cary Hudson. In 2008, University of Missouri student Chad LaRoche shot a brief documentary about the club to help those who are interested understand the club more clearly: Part 1 and Part 2 of the documentary are available on YouTube. A further technological aspect of the club spawned during that year was the "Rock Therapy" podcast which featured Battle of the Band recordings, raw tracks from the concert series showcases, and the sponsor's eccentric, lo-fi forays into the world of pop music. April 2009 brought further recognition for the club: the national-award-winning regional magazine
Missouri Life [http://www.missourilife.com featured the club in an article by John Hendel As soon as the 2009–2010 school year was under way, the Academy of Rock brought Pacific Northwestern punk-garage legends The Pierced Arrows (formerly
Dead Moon) to the Little Theater stage for an [https://web.archive.org/web/20091016021627/http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/2009/oct/14/school-band-with-a-twist/ October 13 concert-and-Q&A. In the spring of the same school year, in collaboration with the Missouri Arts Council, Theater NXS, and MO Blues Society, the club presented northern Mississippi bluesman and
Fat Possum recording artist
Robert Belfour in two workshops involving over 100 students. Also, again aided by a grant from the Assistance League of Mid-America, the club augmented its existing media center CD collection with a selection of American classical music. The Academy of Rock initiated a new program during the 2011-2012 school year: the "Local Music Showcase". This program was designed to expose Hickman students to musicians in their own community and facilitate conversations through performances and question-and-answer sessions that could serve to inspire students to pursue their own futures in music. The opening performance in the series, on November 10, 2011, featured Moonrunner on February 9, 2012, Columbia "indyground" rapper Dallas held court [https://archive.today/20130202173148/http://soundcloud.com/povereem/dallas-live-at-hickman. 2012-2013 was a very quiet year for the Academy of Rock, though, true to its mission, it initiated some new programs: a Sunday Night Showcase series at Columbia's The Bridge which featured concerts by Volatile, Space, Time, and Beauty, Ross Menefee, and The Pound Game, and a music-lesson scholarship [https://archive.today/20130624234952/http://www.columbia.k12.mo.us/hhs/blog/2013/05/23/hickman-students-win-academy-of-rockcolumbia-academy-of-music-scholarship/, in partnership with The Columbia Academy of Music . The scholarship offers $250 worth of lessons to one underclassman boy and one underclassman girl per year. The club also procured two grants, one each from the Assistance League of Mid-Missouri and the Hickman PTSA, to expand the school's CD library [https://web.archive.org/web/20111214062938/http://www.columbia.k12.mo.us/hhs/mc/amroots/amroots.htm. Co-founder Phil Overeem retired from teaching at the end of the school year, turning the club reins over to Mr. Brock Boland. ==Traditions==