Fremont High School (Sunnyvale, California)
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Established | 1923 | |
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Type of institution | Public 4-year | |
Principal | Peggy Raun-Linde | |
Enrollment | 1,900 | |
Location | Sunnyvale, California, USA | |
Colors | red and white | |
Mascot | Firebirds | |
Website | http://www.fhs.fuhsd.org/ | |
Fremont High School is a comprehensive, co-educational, public secondary school that serves eastern Sunnyvale, California. Fremont is currently the only open public high school located in the city of Sunnyvale and is part of the Fremont Union High School District (FUHSD).
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[edit] History
Fremont was originally named West Side Union High School, the first school opened in the West Side Union High School District. In 1923, it opened as the only school in the Sunnyvale-Cupertino (West Valley) area. On March 27, 1925, the Board of Trustees unanimously voted to change the name of the school and district to Fremont Union High School. The original school building was designed by noted California school architect W. H. Weeks.
In 1969, a late-night fire occured the Bell Tower (visible in the photo to right) of the main building but did little damage to the school proper.
On July 1, 1996, after much controversy, the Fremont Union School Board did away with the original Indian mascot at the request of American Indians, replacing it with the current Firebirds mascot.
[edit] Campus
Fremont High School is located at the intersection of Fremont Avenue and Sunnyvale-Saratoga Road. The school has a comparatively large football stadium which is used by nearby schools such as rivals Homestead. Some of the campus' buildings are built in a Spanish mission architectural style. The Fremont Union High School District's offices are also located in the high school's campus.
The site at which the school is located at used to be an old military base. There is a stretch of open space on the campus that runs from the front entrance gates to the rear parking lot (parallel to Fremont Ave). That area was used as a short runway. There are also a couple of WWII-era Quonset huts located near the tennis courts.
[edit] Student enrollment
In the 2002-2003 school year, Fremont had a total enrollment of 1,865 students. Fremont is known for its diversity; nearly every racial group found in California is represented in its student population. The racial makeup is 1% American Indian, 17% Asian American, 5% African American, 14% Filipino American, 34% Latino, 1% Pacific Islander and 28% White. This racial diversity makes Fremont unique in the FUHSD; the other schools in the district are predominantly Asian and White.
[edit] Extracurriculars
Fremont students participate in a wide range of extracurricular activities ranging from marching band and athletics to various cultural and community service clubs like Key Club, Culinary Club, LiNK (Liberty in North Korea), and The Movie Club.[1] The poetry slam team has won numerous awards at spoken word poetry competitions. Furthermore, so far in the 2005-2006 school year, Fremont athletic teams have had successful seasons; Fremont currently holds League Champions titles in Varsity girl's tennis, wrestling, and Varsity girl's basketball. The Fremont Wrestling Team is also currently one of highest ranking high school wrestling teams in the state, after taking 3rd place as a team at State Championships in 2006, as well as having 3 State Champions: Filip Novachkov, Boris Novachkov, and Greg Crane. Boris later won the Walsh Ironman Invitational in Ohio in December 2006, as well successfully defending his state title in 2007. In 2003-2004 the Fremont varsity cheerleaders took 1st place in every cheer competition they competed including the National Cheerleading Championships in Anaheim.
Fremont's rival Homestead High School, located in nearby Cupertino, is also part of the FUHSD.
[edit] Notable alumni
Notable alumni of Fremont High School include:
- Peter Ueberroth - Olympic organizer and 1984 Time Magazine Man of the Year
- Francie Larrieu - Five time Olympian and world record holder
- Steve Kloves - screenwriter for Wonder Boys (Oscar nominated) and Harry Potter
- Teri Hatcher - actress, played Lois Lane in the TV series Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and Susan Meyer in Desperate Housewives for which she won a Golden Globe award
- Carl Ekern - Los Angeles Rams football player
- Jason Simontacchi - St. Louis Cardinals baseball player
- Tully Banta-Cain - San Francisco 49ers football player
- Troy Tulowitzki - Colorado Rockies baseball player
- Bruce Wilhelm - World's Strongest Man (1977, 1978)
- Donna Hanover - Newscaster, actress
- Andrew Fire - UC Berkeley and MIT graduate, currently professor of pathology and genetics at Stanford University and 2006 Nobel Prize co-winner of Medicine or Physiology