Mark Keppel High School
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Mark Keppel High School |
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Established | 1938 |
Type | Public Secondary |
Principal | Russell Yamanaka |
Students | 2466 |
Grades | 9–12 |
Location | Alhambra, California USA |
Colors | Cardinal and White |
Mascot | Aztecs |
Newspaper | The Aztec |
Website | MKHS.org |
Mark Keppel High School is a California Distinguished School in the Alhambra Unified School District, located at 501 E. Hellman Ave., Alhambra, California, 91801.
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[edit] History
Mark Keppel High School is named for Dr. Mark Keppel, Superintendent of Los Angeles County Schools from 1902 to 1928.
Construction of Mark Keppel High School started December 19, 1938, three days after the ground-breaking ceremonies. The school was just one of thousands of projects built by the Public Works Administration during the Great Depression, but this was one that the cities of Monterey Park, Alhambra, the Alhambra High School District, and the “Wilmar” section of unincorporated Los Angeles County would be proud to call their own.
The Mark Keppel student body has long been characterized as a harmonious, hard working group of multi-cultural and multi-racial students from the surrounding communities. Since its inception, Mark Keppel High has been in competition with cross-town rival Alhambra High, which always seemed to enjoy “favorite-son” status with the Alhambra community and school district.
Mark Keppel High has been through it all: the austerity and uncertainty of the Great Depression and World War II, the prosperity, hot rods and slicked back hair of the 1950s, the civil unrest and Counterculture of the 1960s, the globalization and self-absorption of the 1970s, the White Flight in the 1980s, and a redrawing of the feeder-school lines in the mid-1990s.
The redrawing of the feeder-school lines has had a profound effect on MKHS; the elementary school students of the Highlands area of Monterey Park were re-routed from Alhambra High to Mark Keppel High. Some concerned parents banded together and formed the Mark Keppel High School Alliance to lobby the Alhambra School District to improve conditions, renovate the aging campus, and to advocate for the school community.
Today Mark Keppel High School is in many ways the same school that it was when it first opened its doors in 1940. Although many of the defining architectural elements have been removed throughout the years, and the faces and colors of the students have changed, the hard-working culture of the school is much the same. Yes, the school has fallen into disrepair; but the charm and influence that it had in the past still remains. And, as always, Mark Keppel students excel in academics, athletics, and the arts.
[edit] Architecture
Mark Keppel High School is designed in the Streamline Moderne architectural style, a variant of the Art Deco, and a product of the Great Depression. While the Art Deco celebrated the mechanization of the Jazz Age with big, bold, vertical designs, exotic materials, and elaborate decorations, the Streamline Moderne was a more reserved and utilitarian style. The Streamline Moderne mimicked the fast, dynamic look of machines with sleek, aerodynamic and nautical forms, low horizontal designs, rounded corners, and shiny materials.
The architecture of Mark Keppel High School features rounded corners in and outside the auditorium, on the staircase leading up to the front entrance, and in all the interior stairwells. Incised horizontal lines cut through the brick stringcourse which wraps the lower part of the building and the brick pillars between the windows. The stucco texture coat of the facade features designs that emphasize horizontal shapes; blocks between the windows on both floors and along the top of the building contribute to the geometric, yet sleek look of the building. The uppermost block is bounded by a horizontal brick band, and the building is crowned with a small inset ledge. Extra handrails are found in front of the windows in the second floor hallways, in front of the display cases around the administration offices, and on the north wing exterior staircase.
[edit] Murals
Mark Keppel High School features three bas relief murals made by native Southern California artist, Millard Sheets.
The three enamel on stainless steel murals entitled "Early California" decorate the exterior of the auditorium, and depict the founding of California as well as the regional features of Los Angeles County.
The largest mural crowns the entrance to the auditorium and depicts the three main groups that colonized and populated California: the Spanish Conquistadors, the Catholic Missionaries, and American Pioneers. The mural features a golden California on a backdrop of green mountain ranges, dotted with golden Redwood trees, and capped with a large reflective stainless steel sun wrapped with a sunburst decoration. On the left, the Conquistador goes before his ship, claiming the new land in the name of Spain. In the center, a Missionary kneels down, gingerly placing a mission in Southern California. On the right, a Miner 49’er pans for gold while his wife holds their child and rifle, their covered wagons behind them.
The two smaller murals are located on the southern facade of the auditorium, facing toward Hellman Ave. The mural on the left depicts early Los Angeles County with the San Gabriel Mountains to the north, the San Gabriel Mission surrounded by orange groves in the center, a dairy farm with Cowboy below, and the Long Beach Harbor in the south.
The mural on the right showcases the entire state of California. From north to south, a lumberjack cuts down a Redwood tree, two miners pan for gold, and a farmer harvests oranges from his orange grove. A cowboy gallops in on a white horse from the east, while a large ship sails in majestically from the west.
[edit] Student Body
The students of Mark Keppel High always reflect the time periods, and the surroundings in which they live.
Throughout the 1940s the White and Hispanic students got along harmoniously and conflicts were few. Aztec alumni served gallantly in various branches of the military in World War II; Aztecs who remained on the home front reminded students to conserve valuable resources, while others volunteered at area USO’s.
Student participation in activities and school spirit soared throughout the 1950s as the Mark Keppel-Alhambra rivalry (the oldest inter-school rivalry in the California Interscholastic Federation) kicked into high gear. Football games became so popular that they had to be held in the Rose Bowl to accommodate the crowds, and the rivalry became so intense that it soon expanded beyond the football stadium and into other extracurricular activities.
The 1960s began deceptively peacefully, but then the 1967/68 school year saw a radical cultural shift. School spirit and participation in school activities waned as the sixties counterculture found its place on the campus; ASB became to be perceived as an exclusive clique whose activities only inflated their own egos; anti-war sentiment over the Vietnam War became widespread; ethnic activism spurred students to protest. The school dress code was seldom enforced as boys began sporting mop top haircuts, and girls began wearing pants to school unchallenged. Meanwhile, racial tensions emerged as Whites moved out and more Hispanics moved in from East Los Angeles, making Mark Keppel High a school “made up of strangers.”
The 1970s proved a volatile decade as the issues of the previous era remained unresolved. Racial tensions continued to plague some students and further disintegrated into the chaos of gang violence. But as the Vietnam War drew to a close, the predominantly White and Hispanic student population of Mark Keppel High slowly shifted as Vietnamese and Cambodian citizens escaped from their war-ravaged homelands and sought refuge in the United States. Monterey Park became a haven for Asian immigrants because of its proximity to downtown Los Angeles and magazines and advertisements that reached all the way to Hong Kong. Monterey Park soon became known as the “Chinese Beverly Hills.” Participation in school activities and school spirit continued to wane, but did so because of immigrant students’ unfamiliarity with American high school culture rather than with the prevailing counterculture and disillusionment of the times.
The 1990s seemed to be a return to happy times as the younger immigrants became acclimated to American culture while in elementary school and made their way into Mark Keppel High. Student interest was reborn and new clubs formed with more emphasis on the stewardship of the environment and social consciousness. The nineties became a veritable Renaissance of fresh optimism, exemplary academic achievement, exceptional student participation in school activities, and history-making success in athletics.
Today Mark Keppel High marches proudly and confidently into the new millennium, continually raising the bar for academic achievement, school club participation, sports records, and school reputation.
[edit] Alma Mater
- Mark Keppel High we hail thee.
- With honors true and bright.
- The heaven's beauties hail thee.
- With thy Red and White.
- Our Alma Mater true.
- Thy fame has long been made.
- We sing a joyful praise anew.
- Thy memories shall not fade.
[edit] Mascot
Mark Keppel High School's official symbol and mascot is the Aztec.
[edit] Awards and Accreditations
- Western Association of Schools and Colleges six-year accreditation: 1996
- California Distinguished School Award: 2005
- Exemplary Career Technical Education Award: 2005
- Title I Academic Achievement Award: 2004, 2005, 2006
- Governor’s Performance Award: 2001, 2002, 2003
- Ranked 451 on Newsweek's 1,000 "Best High Schools in America"[1]: 2004
[edit] Notable Alumni
- John Kimbro, class of 1948: Prolific author of over eighty books, including forty gothic romance novels.
- Paul Noll, winter class 1949: Author.
- Hank Aguirre, class of 1950: Major League Baseball Pitcher with the Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Chicago Cubs.
- Victor Vurpillat, class of 1950: Mathematician, entrepreneur and venture capitalist who has launched several successful high tech firms, including Novell and Span Works.
- Bradley Wayne Hughes, class of 1952: Founder and director of Public Storage, a self-storage company.
- Dee Pollock, class of 1955: Actor who appeared in many Television shows, including Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Outer Limits, and Rawhide.
- Dan Vadis, class of 1955: Actor who appeared in sword and sandal films such as The Triumph of Hercules, and Clint Eastwood westerns such as High Plains Drifter.
- Larry Burright, class of 1956: Major League Baseball Second baseman.
- Mike McCormick, class of 1956: Major League Baseball Pitcher with the San Francisco Giants, New York Yankees, and the Kansas City Athletics.
- Pete Mikkelson, class of 1957: Major League Baseball Pitcher.
- Foster Hirsch, class of 1961: Professor of film studies at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York; Author of sixteen books on Film and theatre.
- Scott Ostler, class of 1965: Sports columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle
- Jeff Dandurand, class of 1992: Radio DJ and Comedian
- Jorge Quintana, class of 1995: News Anchor