Thomas Jefferson High School (San Antonio, TX)

Thomas Jefferson High School
Address
723 Donaldson Ave.
San Antonio, Texas 78201
Information
School type Public, High School
Founded 1932
School district San Antonio ISD
Principal Joanne Cockrell
Grades 9–12
Language English
Color(s) Red, White and Blue               
Mascot Mustang
Newspaper [The Declaration]
Website
Thomas Jefferson High School
Location in Texas
Built: 1932
Architectural style: Mission/Spanish Revival
NRHP Reference#: 83003093
Significant dates
Added to NRHP: September 22, 1983[1]
Designated NHL: June 29, 1983

Thomas Jefferson High School is a public high school in San Antonio, Texas and is one of ten high schools in the San Antonio Independent School District. Completed in 1932 at a cost of $1,250,000, it was the third high school built in the city.[2]

Contents

History

Sitting amid 30 acres of land on the north west side of San Antonio, is the beautiful and historic campus of Thomas Jefferson High School. It was built in 1931-32 with the assistance of local artisans and craftsmen. In 1929 only two high schools existed in San Antonio, Brackenridge High on the South Side of town and Main Avenue High on the North. While Brackenridge was somewhat new at that time, the Main Avenue High campus was showing its age and due to population growth in the northern areas of town, it was also extremely crowded.

The citizens of San Antonio passed a $3,700,000 school bond proposal and the newly founded senior high school referred to in Life magazine as “the most outstanding high school in America” was to be the last project in this public school building program. The San Antonio Independent School District, with the recommendation of Superintendent Hartley, purchased a 33-acre tract of land known as Spanish Acres for $94,588.75. It was a site overgrown with weeds and mesquite trees, accessible only on horseback because there were no roads past Fredericksburg Road at the time.

The School Board along with Phelps and DeWees, project supervising architects, recommended the architectural firm of Adams and Adams to design the building. Created in a Spanish Moorish design to reflect its proximity to The Old Spanish Trail, it was to be an expensive building costing more that $1,250,000. School District officials were criticized for this extravagance during the Depression Era when hundreds waited in bread lines and families went hungry. The structure looked like a luxury hotel, a university campus, or a palatial residence built like a Spanish estate [see Architecture].

The construction of the school in 1931-32 did put food on the table for the families of many local workers. Local artisans in the Works Progress Administration Program (WPA) built most of the structure and their logo still remains on tiles in the library at the school. Eight mule-drawn rigs were used to dig the 35-foot deep holes for the foundation. An Italian immigrant, Hannibal Pianta and his son Eugene did the elaborate carvings that create the columns of the entryway at the main entrance. The ornamental concrete was made in sections using concrete molds located at the Pianta Company on Fredericksburg Road and then transported to the site. The Pianta family also did the ornamental work at the Aztec theater, and their grandfather contributed to the elaborate stonework at the Texas State Capitol. The interior of the school and a special hexagonal pond located in an interior patio are all ornamented with decorative tile in the Spanish motif created by Tony Lozano of Redondo Tile.

Construction began in the fall of 1930 and when completed in January 1932, it was like no other school in the entire country. The building itself, in Spanish-Moorish design, is built around two large patios, with a large silver-domed tower and a sub-tower. The roof is made of red Spanish tile and wrought iron balconies protrude from the windows.

The Auditorium has a capacity of 2,000 students, an inclined floor leading to a sunken orchestra pit and, in back, an enclosed movie projection booth. A large ornate proscenium arch in a half circle crowns the stage. The school was the first to have its own gymnasium and its own “Heraldic Coat of Arms” created by Max Fredrick of Adams and Adams. The crest is cast on all four sides of the tower dome and bears the motto “In omni uno” or “All for one and one for all.”

When it opened, Jefferson High School held regular classes in history and math, but also featured classes in manners, dancing, and radio broadcasting. The nearly 1,400 students who chose to transfer from Main Avenue High School picked the name Thomas Jefferson High School, the colors red and blue, and the mustang as their mascot. Before the end of its first decade, Jefferson High School had become nationally and internationally known.

In 1937, Jefferson High was chosen out of 1,500 schools as the most outstanding high school in America. The following year, March 1938, Life Magazine featured the story of Jefferson High School in pictures. Twentieth Century Fox filmed two movies on the Jefferson campus: “High School” starring Jane Withers in 1938 and its sequel “Texas Girl” also with Jane Withers in 1939. On March 14, 1938, Paramount Pictures began making a special newsreel of Jefferson as America’s most modern high school. By the close of 1938, Jefferson had appeared in Life, The American Weekly and several European publications; in 1947 it also appeared in National Geographic magazine.

The feature in Life Magazine had a cover photo of two of the famous Jefferson Lassos, a pep club founded by Miss Constance Douglas in October 1932. The uptown cowgirl look of the group featured a blue flannel skirt, blue bolero jacket, red satin blouse, a pearl gray Stetson hat and a lasso. In April 1940, in support of the war effort, shots were made for a new short film, “Lasso Wizards” as entertainment for servicemen overseas. In 1944 the students had bought enough war bonds to buy forty Jeeps and an airplane for the Air Force which was named “The Spirit of Thomas Jefferson”. By November 1942, (the school?) had added 500 beds to the 105 bed emergency hospital, which led any other agency in Texas at the time. Thomas Jefferson High was behind the war effort and was ready for any emergency.

To preserve the unique heritage of the school, the Student Council of 1982-83 sought to have the building declared a city Historical Landmark. On May 15, 1983 after approval of the School Board, the San Antonio Historical Society and the San Antonio City Council made it official. On July 30, 1983 the Texas State Historical Society voted unanimously to make the structure a state landmark as well. The Society also recommended to the Federal Department of the Interior that Jefferson be listed on the National Register of Historic Places and both the landscaping and architecture were approved on September 22, 1983.

Over the years, both the school building and the student body have received national and international recognition in newspapers, magazines, and films. The school has produced numerous outstanding alumni in the fields of government, the military, communications, education, athletics, science, the medical and legal professions, business and the fine arts. Thomas Jefferson High School remains a cornerstone of the community today. With its Spanish Moorish design, it reflects the cultural diversity of the City of San Antonio as it reminds us of the many possibilities and talents of those who built it during the hard times of the Great Depression.[3]

Architecture

Its Moorish/Spanish architecture make it a visually distinct element in what was the old Woodlawn district.

Recognition

In 1983 Jefferson was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[4] In 1995, it was included in the Local Historic District by the City of San Antonio.[5] In 2010, Jefferson was honored to be selected as Grammy Signature Award Winner.[6]

School Song

THOMAS JEFFERSON ALMA MATER
There is a school we all love well,
‘tis THOMAS JEFFERSON
Her glories we all always tell,
Our THOMAS JEFFERSON.
On field and campus winning boys
And girls all ready stand for
Dear old THOMAS JEFFERSON
Our Alma Mater Grand
THOMAS JEFFERSON
THOMAS JEFFERSON
Dear old school of mine,
I’ll sing thy praises everywhere,
Dear THOMAS JEFFERSON.
[3]

FIGHT SONG - (FIGHT THE TEAM) ACROSS THE FIELD
Fight the team across the field
Show them Jeff High is here
Set the Earth reverberating
With a mighty cheer
RAH! RAH! RAH!
Hit them hard and see how they fall
Never let that team get the ball
Hail! Hail! The gang's all here
So let's beat the Bears now!
THOMAS JEFFERSON
THOMAS JEFFERSON
For who! For whom!
For JEFFERSON!
[3]

TJHS Historical Preservation Society

The Thomas Jefferson High School Historical Preservation Society is a Non-Profit IRS Designation 501(c)3 Organization.

The purpose of the TJHS Historical Preservation Society is to provide a focal point for the leadership and involvement required to develop and implement plans to preserve and encourage the continued preservation of buildings, objects, and places related to the historical significance of Thomas Jefferson High School and its architectural and natural beauty. We want those who walk through its doors today, those that have come before, and those in the future to continue to be guided by the richness of Jefferson's heritage.

TJHS Historical Preservation Society wants to inform the public of our efforts and invite those who would step forward to help us in our efforts. TJHS Historical Preservation Society is honored by your commitment to the historical preservation of Thomas Jefferson High School.
[3]

Distinguished Alumni

Athletics

Arts & Entertainment

Business

Business - Lawyers

Communications

Education

Government

Military

Physical Science

Health Science - Dentists

Health Science - Physicians or surgeons

Others

[3]

References

External links