Mission High School (San Francisco, California)

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Mission High School (San Francisco, California)
Mission High School, San Francisco
Location
3750 18th Street
San Francisco, California,
United States 94114

Information
Principal Kevin Truitt
Enrollment

881

Faculty 64
Campus Urban
Teams Bears
Homepage

Mission High School is an American public high school located in San Francisco, California. It serves grades 9-12 as part of the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD).

Mission is the oldest high school on its original site in San Francisco; it has been on 18th Street, between Dolores and Church, since 1896. The original campus burned in 1922, and the replacement was completed in two stages, the west wing in 1925 and the main building was dedicated by San Francisco mayor James Rolph on June 12, 1927. Originally, girls and boys had separate courtyards. The boys' is overlooked by the "baby tower", about 100 feet high, and the girls' (right) topped by a 127-foot-high baroque dome. Mission Creek runs beneath the school.

The school is two blocks from Mission Dolores, from which it gets its name.

The lobby leads to a theater that has 1,750 folding wooden seats on two levels and a gold leaf ceiling. Grand as any movie palace, it was outfitted with twin 35mm projectors. Funding never came through for the elaborate pipe organ system it was promised, but the chandeliers have been re-lamped.

Contents

[edit] History

Mission High School was founded in 1890, although it was housed in various Mission District locations until 1896. That year, the Board of Education purchased a parcel of land from the Jewish Cemetery Association to construct a permanent school building. The original Mission High School building was completed in 1898 as a three-story brick school designed in the Italian Renaissance Beaux-Arts style. The building withstood the 1906 Earthquake, and became a neighborhood shelter, while Dolores Park, which stands across the street from the school, became a tent city for displaced residents.

In 1922, the original Mission High School was destroyed by fire. The present Mission High School complex was then constructed in a Mediterranean Revival\Baroque Churrigueresque style between 1925 and 1927, during the height of San Francisco’s "Golden Age" of school construction. John Reid, Jr., San Francisco's City Architect, was the designer. The elaborate ornamentation on the school is likely due in part to the visual proximity to the nearby Mission Dolores Basilica, which features towers and ornamentation in the Churrigueresque architectural style.

In 1936, California artist Edith Anne Hamlin was commissioned under the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Art Project to create a series of western-themed murals for the school. Noted artist Maynard Dixon consulted with Hamlin on the murals, and the pair married in 1937. Two murals showing the founding of nearby Mission Dolores still survive, while the third was lost during a 1970s seismic retrofit. The late 1930s also saw the construction of Drew Athletic Field behind the school, in an area that had been occupied by houses fronting on Dorland Street (the street was removed to construct the field).

Mission High School was closed between 1972 and 1978 in order to retrofit the building to meet earthquake safety standards. This included the removal of some of the buildings architectural ornamentation, as well as the loss of the WPA Hamlin mural. The building continues to function as a public high school and remains an architectural landmark in the Dolores Park area of San Francisco.

The school is currently being remodeled. Also, in the 2007-08 school year, principal Kevin Truitt won SFUSD Principal of the year.

[edit] The Athletic Scholarship Advancement Program

Probably the most attractive program at Mission is the Academic Scholars Advancement Program(ASAP). This past summer ASAP sent 150 Mission High School athletes attended 31 programs. They traveled to 22 locations in nine states, and a few ventured as far as Japan, China, and Italy. The best part is that ASAP helps cover the bill to send these kids to a summer program.


A Partial List of Summer Programs

  • Brown U. Leadership and Global Health Class
  • Camp CEO
  • Columbia U. Pre-College
  • Cornell U. Summer College
  • Coro Leadership
  • Cosmos (Math and Science Program)
  • De Young Museum
  • Outward Bound
  • St. Luke’s Hospital
  • Santa Clara U.
    • Engineering Program
    • Softball- Girls
  • Stanford U.
    • Basketball Camp-Boys
    • Cross-Country Camp-Boys
    • Junior State of America
    • Math and Science Pre-med
    • Track and Field Camp-Boys
    • Wrestling Camp-Boys
  • UC-Berkeley
    • Football-Boys
    • Gladstone Program
    • Soccer Camp-Boys
    • Soccer Camp-Girls
    • SMASH ( Math and Science Academy)
  • UC-Santa Cruz
    • Spirit Squad Camp-Girls



[edit] Demographics

The current student body is extraordinarily diverse, with Latino and African American students constituting the two largest ethnic groups, although neither group makes up a majority of the student body.

[edit] 2005-2006

  • 881 students:
Hispanic African American Asian Filipino White no response Pacific Islander American Indian
39.4% 21.7% 21.7% 7.5% 6.7% 1.5% 1.4% 0.2%
  • 64 certified staff; M/F (45.3/54.7):
White Asian no response Hispanic African American Filipino American Indian Pacific Islander
53.1% 14.1% 14.1% 10.9% 6.2% 1.6% 0% 0%

(source: California Department of Education)

[edit] Notable people

[edit] See also

[edit] External links