General William J. Palmer High School
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This article is on the high school located in Colorado Springs. For the high school located in Monument, Colorado, please see Lewis-Palmer High School.
General William J. Palmer High School | |
A Tradition of Excellence
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Location | |
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301 North Nevada Avenue Colorado Springs, Colorado |
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Information | |
School district | Colorado Springs School District 11 |
Affiliation(s) | Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
Enrollment |
2013 students |
Type | Public Secondary |
Grades | 9 to 12 |
Campus | National Register of Historic Places |
Mascot | eagle |
Color(s) | brown and white |
Established | 1874 |
Information | http://www.d11.org/palmer/ask_palmer.htm |
Nickname | Terrors |
Newspaper | The Lever |
Yearbook | Retrospect |
TV | Terror TV |
Homepage | http://www.d11.org/palmer/ |
General William J. Palmer High School is a secondary school located in downtown Colorado Springs, Colorado. The school has a student population of approximately 1800, and attracts enrollment from all over the city. The flagship high school of School District 11, Palmer has the oldest International Baccalaureate (IB) program in the area, founded in 1991.
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[edit] History
Palmer High School is located at 301 North Nevada Avenue in Colorado Springs. The present building was built by the Works Progress Administration under Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1940. Originally named Colorado Springs High School, Palmer High School was re-named in 1959 after the city's founder, General William Jackson Palmer. At that date, the city had expanded enough to warrant the building of a second high school, Roy J. Wasson High School.
The school traces its history back to the 1870s and still uses a "C" for varsity letters, which through 1986 was referred to as the Broken Circle Tribe. In 1894, the successful football team earned the nickname "holy terrors," and so the school adopted the nickname "Terrors." In 1923, the football team won the national championship, the same year that Fred Fink wrote the beloved "Terror Fight Song." Prior to 1945, the school's mascot was a pit bull.
In 1945, a Native American student, Don Willis, designed Eaglebeak, a caricature of a fictitious Indian chieftain, beloved and respected by students and faculty alike, and the teams became the Terrors. In 1985 a local political hopeful criticized the mascot as racist to further his election bid, making Palmer one of the very first cases of controversy over a Native American mascot in the United States. Despite the fact that the politician, having lost the election, later publicly apologized to the student body and retracted the charge of racism, the damage was done and Eaglebeak was not to return. In the following years, Palmer experimented with a variety of mascots, to include a two-month flirtation with the Tasmanian devil from Warner Brothers, which nearly led to a lawsuit.
In the early 1990s the high school chose an eagle as its mascot, naming it "Eaglebeak", but without the historical background of the original.
[edit] School activities and programs
The Lever is Palmer's student run newspaper. It is run by students with a teacher serving as an advisor. The newspaper is published nearly every school month, and is free to all students and staff members. Recently, the newspaper digitized its previous issues, and can now be accessed online.
Terror TV is a student television program, about five minutes long, featuring current students and teachers in skits, interviews, Palmer events and coverage.
[edit] Feeder patterns
Middle schools that feed into Palmer include
- Horace Mann Middle School
- North Middle School
[edit] Notable alumni
Notable alumni of Palmer High School include:
- Robert M. Isaac (1945, as Colorado Springs High School), mayor of Colorado Springs
- Cassandra Peterson (1969), who played Elvira, Mistress of the Dark
- Reginald McKnight (1974) novelist, short story writer, Hamilton Holmes Professor of English at the University of Georgia
- Chris Fowler (1981), host of ESPN College Gameday
- Lance Armstrong, seven consecutive time Tour de France winner, founder of the philanthropic Lance Armstrong Foundation[1]
- Bryce Case (2000), rapper, former hacker, and internet entrepreneur
[edit] See also
[edit] External links and references
- official Palmer High School website
- history
- CSHS/Palmer Alumni Association
- Student's art battle winds up unifying, Mark Arnest, The Gazette (May 20, 2005)
- Class dismissed: Planned Parenthood ejected from District 11 schools, deYoanna, Michael, The Independent (February 24, 2005)
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