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In
1891,
Miss Minnie Tubbs opened the first school in Lubbock.
She had fifteen pupils whom she taught in a store
located on the southwest corner of the block just
east of the present city square.
P.
F. Brown established the second school in Lubbock
in
1892.
Those who succeeded him in conducting the one teacher
school were C. F. Stubbs, Mrs. Lee K. Anten, M. N.
Park, and A. J. Clark. An assistant was hired for
Miss Laura Davis in
1898,
and one room was added to the building. Miss Davis
was followed by George R. Bean, R. R. Holland, B.
N. Graham, Ed Couch and W. S. Norton.
The
first independent school district in Lubbock County
was formed on April 14,
1907.
It had a ten mile radius which included the town of
Lubbock.
The
first superintendent, Mr. E. R. Haynes, was hired
in
1907.
After the original building burned in
1909,
a new building was erected just south of the Burrus
Elevator. That fall, Mr. G. N. Atkinson came to Lubbock
and served as teacher in the eight room frame building.
In
1909
bonds worth $25,000 were issued, and a brick building
with two stories and a basement was built. This building
was located on the site where the city hall offices
are located. Mr. J. K. Wester became superintendent
in
1910
and Mr. G. N. Atkinson became high school principal.
It was during this administration that the standards
of the school were raised from those of a high school
to a first class rating. Mr. M. M. Dupre, elected
superintendent in
1914,
introduced manual training, home economics, and agriculture.
In
1916
there were eight teachers and the school had sixteen
affiliated credits.
In
1922
a bond issue provided for a new high school. This
school of 28 teachers was located between 13th and
14th streets in the 2000 block. Bonds were voted in
1925
for the addition of two study halls. This was the
old Thompson Junior High building.
Principal
G. N. Atkinson became acting superintendent; after
the fall of
1925
Mr. M. N. Duncan became superintendent. During his
term, public speaking was added to the curriculum,
and three supervisors were added to the staff.
Construction
of the present high school building was begun in
1930.
The School Board appropriated $650,000 for the new
building on 19th street, which was a controversial
location because some parents felt that the new high
school was too far from town and that their students
would have to ride their horses too far to go to school.
The contractor depleted the $650,000 before the building
was completed. However, because he refused to compromise
on the workmanship or materials in the new school,
the contractor sold his family's oil fields in East
Texas to have the money to complete the building.
He went broke and never built another building after
completing Lubbock High School in
1931.
In
the fall of
1934
Dr. Kenneth Oberholtzer became superintendent. In
1937,
Dr. W. B. Irwin was elected to this position, being
followed by Mr. R. W. Matthews in
1944.
In
1951,
Mr. Matthews resigned and Mr. Nat Williams came to
Lubbock to serve as superintendent. . It is interesting
to note that our high school has had only twelve principals:
| 1 |
Mr.
Atkinson |
who
served until 1926 |
| 2 |
Mr.
R. W. Matthews |
from
1926 to 1944 |
| 3 |
Mr.
Floyd Honey |
from
1944 to 1955 |
| 4 |
Mr.
Jay E. Gordon |
from
1955 to 1957 |
| 5 |
Mr.
W. H. Howarth |
from
1957 to 1960 |
| 6 |
Mr.
Howard Price |
from
1961 to 1965 |
| 7 |
Mr.
E. C. Leslie |
from
1965 to 1969 |
| 8 |
Mr.
Jerry Crawford |
from
1969 to 1970 |
| 9 |
Mr.
Knox Williams |
from 1970 to 1991 |
| 10 |
Mrs.
Rose Mediano |
1991
- 1996 |
| 11 |
Patrick
Cates |
1996
to 2000 |
| 12 |
Doyle
Vogler |
named
to the position in the summer of 2000 |
There
was some discussion of the construction of a vocational
high school sometime after the conclusion of World
War II. Mr. Matthews, superintendent of Lubbock Public
Schools at that time, suggested the need of a new
high school. Lubbock High School and Dunbar High School
were the only high schools serving Lubbock, and as
the population grew in a southwest direction another
liberal arts high school was needed with all three
schools teaching approximately the same subjects.
Mrs. Ayers, a school publicity director, prepared
a brochure which portrayed the enormous growth in
population and scholastics in Lubbock in
1950.
This study revealed that we would be in dire need
of a new high school sometime before
1960.
The school board, acting upon a recommendation by
Mr. Williams, superintendent of the Lubbock Public
Schools, purchased the site in
1953.
The
construction of the new high school started in the
spring of
1954.
In the spring of
1955,
the new high school was named
Monterey, and the big
job of separating the Lubbock and Monterey student
bodies was begun. In September of
1955,
even before the building was completed,
Monterey High
School opened its doors for the new student body.
Long time principal, Mr. Floyd Honey, left
LHS to
open Monterey.
With the opening of
MHS, a
new rivalry was born with the city now having two high
schools that would compete against each other at the
same level. Up until this time the main
Lubbock High
rivalry was to be found to the north with the Amarillo
Sandies.
Again in
1965,
the Lubbock High Student
Body was divided as
Coronado
High School opened. In the fall of
1967, Estacado was welcomed as the newest of the city's
high schools.
In
1970,
Mr. Nat Williams retired and was followed by Mr. Ed
Irons as superintendent. During Mr. Ironss tenure
many major changes came about at
Lubbock High.
Estacado
took another segment of the
Lubbock High student body
and in
1970,
the Federal Court ordered the boundary between
Lubbock
High and Dunbar High School changed, which shifted another large
portion of the student body away from
Lubbock High.
During this hearing, there was talk of closing
Lubbock
High.
In
1979,
in order to raise the enrollment of
Lubbock High,
LEAP (the Lubbock Exemplary Academic Program) was
developed. This program offered many unique courses
to high school students all over the city.
Lubbock
High began to increase its enrollment and the school
district had a true academic and enriched high school
magnet program.
To
further enhance the offerings at
Lubbock High, in
1983
the innovative four day week was introduced. This
consisted of an academic week with six seventy minute
periods of instruction and an activity Friday designed
to offer students courses not normally offered in
the high school curriculum.
Lubbock High School
was
the first school in Texas and only the third in the
country to offer a four-day academic week schedule.
Along with this program came the opportunity for
Lubbock
High seniors to enroll at
Texas Tech for college course
work during their senior year.
1982
was Lubbock High's 50th anniversary in the beautiful
building on 19th Street. During the first 50 years,
the building has been enlarged to include the cafeteria
and the East wing, the West wing for science, homemaking
and vocational shops, a new library over the cafeteria,
a new gym and woodworking shop north of the building,
a tennis field house with 5 additional courts, an
administrative office complex in the open patio, and
the Chapman Athletic Complex to replace the old Chapman
gym which was lost in a fire.
1983
and beyond found the school district with a new superintendent,
Dr. E. C. Leslie, a long-time Westerner, and
Lubbock
High on the move serving students from the entire
school district.
1989
began a new era for LISD as Dr. E. C. Leslie announced
his plans to retire and Dr. Mike Moses assumed leadership
of the district . LEAP celebrated its 10th year anniversary,
establishing Lubbock High as an extremely successful
academic magnet program. Lubbock High's enrollment
soared, making it the largest high school in the district,
and for the first time a numerical limit was placed
on the program to help balance enrollment among the
five high schools.
In
the fall of
1991
a new era began for
Lubbock High with the appointment
of Rose Mediano, the first female high school principal
in LISD. Additionally new construction to update
Lubbock
High School environmentally with central air conditioning
and heating and the addition of new facilities was
begun at a cost of $3.9 million dollars.
In
1993
the Texas Education Agency selected
Lubbock High School
as one of the original eighteen schools for the prestigious
Mentor School program. The Mentor School program focuses
on high schools throughout the state that are making
advances in innovative teaching, site-based decision
making and restructuring of the school day.
Lubbock
High School hosts visitors from across the state to
showcase its programs.
During
the
1993-94
school year Lubbock High School became a Professional
Development School. As a Professional Development
School, Lubbock High School works closely with Texas
Tech University to aid in the education of students
aspiring to become teachers. The Professional Development
School designation will enable staff to enrich their
teaching skills which then impact student learning.
Lubbock High School
was the first high school Professional
Development School in this area.
During
the
1994-1995
school year, Dr. Mike Moses was named Commissioner
of Education for the State of Texas, and Dr. Curtis
Culwell became superintendent of LISD. A new practice
gym has been added to the
Lubbock High School campus
between the woodworking shop and the spectator gym.
Although replacing a building with such unique architecture,
workmanship, and materials would be virtually impossible
today, recent estimates put the value of
Lubbock High
School in excess of $100 million dollars.
Lubbock
High implemented an alternating block schedule in
1995-1996
for the Monday-Thursday academic week, but in the
spring of
1996,
LHS was named a
National Blue Ribbon School
by the
U.S. Department of Education. The
Blue Ribbon Award
is the highest honor given to any public or private
school in the nation. Awarded for overall excellence
in educational programs, the
Blue Ribbon Award places
Lubbock
High among the truly elite schools in the nation.
In
the spring of
1997,
Lubbock High dedicated
Westerner Field, the new baseball
complex on North University Avenue. The spring of
1999
also saw Lubbock High School become the first city
high school to have its own softball field with the
dedication of
Lady Westerner Field also located on
North University.
In
recognition of the commitment to the school motto,
"Sportsmanship, Then Victory," the University
Interscholastic League named
Lubbock High School the AAAAA Texas State Sportsmanship Champion School for
1998.
The
1998-99
school year brought
Lubbock High more fully into the
age of technology. As the result of a grant from the
Texas Infrastructure Fund for over $88,000, virtually
every room in the building will have computers to
access the Internet In the spring of 1999.
In
the summer of
1999,
Lubbock High School was admitted to the
International
Baccalaureate Program, considered to be the most prestigious,
most rigorous curriculum program in the world.
LHS
began offering
IB courses in the 2000-2001 school
year, and the Class of 2002 was the first group
of students to be able to earn an
International Baccalaureate
Diploma at Lubbock High School. The 2004-2005 school
year marks the 25th anniversary of the Lubbock Exemplary
Academic Program (LEAP), one of the states most
successful academic magnet programs.
In the spring of
2000
the Texas Association of Secondary School Principals
named Patrick Cates principal of the year for the
state of Texas. In the summer of 2000, Doyle Vogler,
long-time
Lubbock High School teacher and administrator,
was named principal of
Lubbock High
School.
The fall of 2006 will usher in a another new era in
the life of Lubbock High as freshman will be added to
the student body. This will mean that the school will
open it doors to over 1,300 new students as freshman
and sophomores will be brand new to the building. The
student population will swell to over 2,300 students!
New construction for this new era includes: demolition
of the original gymnasium interior and construction of
a new state of the art library in that area, new
classrooms constructed in the area of the current
library, a new practice gymnasium, new classrooms in
existing rooms that are large enough to be divided,
new construction at Chapman field that includes a new
weight room and locker rooms, the relocation of the
administrative office complex to the gym area now used
for dance. The Dance and Gymnastics programs were
relocated to Lomax Center.
Graduates
of Lubbock High School per year
No record for unlisted years.
| 1909
- 10 |
1930 - |
1950
- 317 |
1970
- 448 |
1990
- 404 |
|
1910 - ? |
1931 - 258 |
1951
- 369 |
1971
- 471 |
1991
- 428 |
|
1911 - ? |
1932 - 277 |
1952
- 345 |
1972
- 391 |
1992
- 336 |
|
1912 - 5 |
1933 - 248 |
1953
- 455 |
1973
- 364 |
1993
- 361 |
|
1913 - ? |
1934 - 200 |
1954
- 478 |
1974
- 337 |
1994
- 405 |
|
1914 - 10 |
1935 - 216 |
1955
- 525 |
1975
- 369 |
1995
- 415 |
|
1915 - 8 |
1937 - 278 |
1956
- 338 |
1976
- 387 |
1996
- 450 |
|
1916 - 15 |
1938 - 251 |
1957
- 352 |
1977
- 325 |
1997
- 525 |
|
1917 - 16 |
1939 - 275 |
1958
- 352 |
1978
- 323 |
1998
- 564 |
|
1918 - 21 |
1940 - 283 |
1959
- 369 |
1979
- 343 |
1999
- 541 |
|
1919 - 18 |
1941 - 280 |
1960
- 411 |
1980
- 345 |
2000
- 557 |
|
1920 - 18 |
1942 - 232 |
1961
- 428 |
1981
- 377 |
2001- 485 |
|
1921 - 54 |
1943 - 332 |
1962
- 438 |
1982
- 386 |
2002- 540 |
|
1922 - 42 |
1944 - 321 |
1963
- 392 |
1983
- 406 |
2003 - 571 |
|
1923 - 49 |
1945 - 295 |
1964
- 441 |
1984
- 400 |
2004 - 572 |
|
1924 - 77 |
1946 - 343 |
1965
- 587 |
1985
- 381 |
2005 - 585 |
|
1925 - 117 |
1947 - 410 |
1966
- 503 |
1986
- 367 |
2006 - 550 |
|
1926 - 106 |
1948 - 427 |
1967
- 534 |
1987
- 360 |
|
|
1927 - 171 |
1949 - 228 |
1968
- 407 |
1988
- 368 |
|
|
1928 - 231 |
|
1969
- 421 |
1989
- 445 |
|
|
1929 - 308 |
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