[4] On August 21, 1964, five black students were refused enrollment at Charles Page which was at that time an all-white high school.
[5] In March 2019, voters passed a general obligation bond measure to fund a new Ninth Grade Center add-on at the CPHS campus.
An openly gay student, Michael Shackelford, was the focus of a series of articles in The Washington Post which brought national attention to the school.
[10] This national attention caught the eye of radical preacher Fred Phelps of Topeka, Kansas Westboro Baptist Church who came and protested at Charles Page in November 2004.
Travis Rhodes took up the reins from 1961 to 1962 and led Charles Page to an undefeated season in 1962, but they were unable to compete in the playoffs because they weren't in an eligible conference.
At one point, football player Arlie Christmas accidentally set his leg on fire, briefly, without injury.
In 1987, the Sandites shared a district title with Stillwater and Bartlesville and ended 10-3 after defeating Memorial and Norman in the playoffs before falling 14–10 to Lawton in the third round.
They defeated #10 Union and #9 Jenks before falling to Putnam North in the third round of the playoffs, finishing the season ranked fifth.
In 1997, LD Bains retired and Archie Loehr took over, leading the Sandites to a perfect regular season with a district title, a victory over #2 Stillwater, and three shutouts.
2009 was expected to be Charles Page's year, but Deaton broke his collarbone in the opening game and missed half the season.
The regular season left the Sandites with a 7–3 record with two shutouts and a 63–6 win against Nathan Hale which tied for their second-highest scoring game of all time.
Sand Springs registered only two true losses in the regular season, to Bartlesville and Booker T Washington in very close games.
In the quarterfinals Sand Springs dominated Stillwater, where Trace Fleischman had 3 touchdowns 2 receiving a one rushing with a 49-14 win.
Sand springs beat the Spartans just a few weeks before at home in a 21-0 shut out, led by middle linebacker Jacob taber.
The original stadium was built in 1948–1949 to replace the older Dubie Field that was located at 2nd and Washington in Sand Springs.