Boyle County High School is a public high school located in Danville, Kentucky, United States. It serves nearly 900 students in grades 9âÂÂ12. The school opened to students in the 1963âÂÂ1964 school year. The school was created to merge Perryville, Forkland, Junction City, and Parksville students into one school. Students came from four county schools that served grades 1âÂÂ12 in the same building. Additionally, eighth graders from East End Elementary (grades 1âÂÂ8) became part of the new high school.
The makeup of the student body is 53.1% male and 46.9% female. 43.7% of students are eligible for the free or reduced-price lunch program. The student-teacher ratio is 16:1.
Boyle County was ranked top 15 among the 2017âÂÂ18 Kentucky Department of Education student assessment at grade levels for studentsâ math and reading scores. It has been ranked among the top 50 in the state for âÂÂtransition readinessâ from middle school to college. It was ranked in the top 40 high schools for its âÂÂgraduation rateâ scores. It also excelled in ACT scores and advanced AP courses. The high school averaged a composite ACT score of 22 and 19 percent of the senior class scored a 28 or higher.
Boyle County competes in the several interscholastic sports as the Rebels (boys) and Lady Rebels (girls). The school has rivalries with neighboring schools Danville High School and Lincoln County High School.
Boyle County has been Kentucky High School Athletic Association State Champion in football thirteen times. In 2009, Boyle County won their sixth title by rallying from a 22âÂÂ7 to beat Lone Oak 42âÂÂ39 in double overtime.
The 2017 championship was their first since 2010; they won 40âÂÂ21 over Corbin. They were state runner-up in 2004 with a 13âÂÂ2 record and then lost 22âÂÂ6 to Highlands. From 2014 to 2019, their head coach was Chuck Smith. He was rehired after being Boyle County's head coach from 1992 to 2004. The team was also coached by Larry French; he started in 2008 and left for Southwestern High School in 2013. ShaDon Brown, recently hired as safeties coach for the Louisville Cardinals, served as an assistant coach for the team's 2007 season. In 2020, Justin Haddix was named the thirteenth head coach in program history. He has led the Rebels to five state championships in the past six seasons, and has amassed a 79âÂÂ5 record since being hired.
Under the direction of Tim Blevins, Boyle County has produced three state championship marching bands. The Marching Rebels were crowned the Kentucky Music Educators Association (KMEA) Class A State Champions in 2001, 2002, and 2003. KMEA classes are assigned based on enrollment at participating high school. The Marching Rebels were state finalists in 1996, 2004 (A), 2005 (AAA), 2006 (AAA), 2007 (AAA), 2008 (AAAA), 2009 (AAA), and 2010 (AAA).
In 2025, the head coach of the Boyle County Middle School academic team, Tyler Murphy, also assumed the coaching responsibilities of the Boyle County High School academic team. Under Murphy, the team won two overall regional championships and two Quick Recall regional championships. The previous head coach had also secured a regional title, resulting in the program doubling its number of overall regional championships over a three-year period. The team made it the Smart 16 in both 2025 and 2026.