Alexander Hamilton High School (Los Angeles)
Alexander Hamilton High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
2955 South Robertson Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90034 United States | |
Coordinates | 34°02′00″N 118°23′23″W / 34.033451°N 118.389667°WCoordinates: 34°02′00″N 118°23′23″W / 34.033451°N 118.389667°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Established | 1931 |
Principal | Brenda Pensamiento |
Enrollment | 3,022 |
School color(s) | Green and White |
Athletics conference |
CIF Los Angeles City Section Western League |
Mascot | "Yankees" |
Team name | Yankees |
Website | Hamilton Home Page |
Alexander Hamilton High School is a public high school in the Castle Heights neighborhood within the Westside of Los Angeles, California, United States. It is in the Los Angeles Unified School District. It was established in 1931.
History
Alexander Hamilton High School opened in fall 1931, with Thomas Hughes Elson as the principal.[1] It was designed by architects John C. Austin and Frederick C. Ashley. The three-story administration building held the administration, library, and science departments and 24 classrooms. Other buildings were a manual training building, another for physical training, and a fourth for the cafeteria and "domestic science." The capacity would be 1000, with plans permitting increasing to 2500. Building costs were $125,000 for the land, $400,000 for the structure, and $200,000 for equipment.[2] Built in the Northern Italian Renaissance style, multicolored and patterned brickwork, elaborate cast stone decoration, and a bell tower clad in verdigris copper distinguish the building.[3]
In May 1931, while Hamilton was under construction, architects Austin and Ashley were selected to design Griffith Observatory.[4] Individually, each had designed a Carnegie library: Austin conceived the Anaheim Public Library (opened 1909), and Ashley drew up Los Angeles' Arroyo Seco branch library (opened 1914). Together, they had designed Monrovia High School (opened 1928 - its front stairs are like Hamilton's, and it also has a bell tower). Austin designed Los Angeles High School's third location (opened 1917; demolished 1971) and the Shrine Auditorium (opened 1926), and he was one of three designers of Los Angeles City Hall (opened January 1, 1928).
The school's builders were Sarver & Zoss. Three post offices they later built are on the National Register of Historic Places: the Beverly Hills Main Post Office (opened 1934); the San Pedro Post Office (opened 1935), and Los Angeles' Terminal Annex (opened 1940).
Austin & Ashley later designed Hamilton's $100,000, six-room, auditorium, Waidelich Hall [5] which opened on April 20, 1937.[6] Arthur George Waidelich was the second principal (1935-1936) and died at the school.[7] In February 21, 1989, the auditorium was renamed Norman J. Pattiz Concert Hall.[8] A brass plaque made by the industrial arts department to commemorate the 1937 dedication was removed during renovation.
Early photographs from the school's archives show the campus in its pre-World War II state, with only the main building completed. The photos show dozens of 1920s and 30s cars parked along Robertson Boulevard in front of the school. The bell tower still exists today, but no longer houses a working bell.
Today, there exist Brown Hall (which houses administrative offices, the library, and classrooms and is named in honor of Walker Brown, Principal (1940-1956),[9] the lab building, the tech building, the humanities building, the music building, and other structures. There is a large Theater Hall, named Norman J. Pattiz Concert Hall[8]), a cafeteria, two gym buildings (boys' and girls'), and a workshop building. On the west part of the campus is Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Distribution Station 20 and Cheviot Hills High School, a continuation school. The athletic fields include Al Michaels Field (a football and track stadium named for sportscaster Al Michaels, Hamilton's famous alum) and a community garden, the Hami Garden. The Hami Garden was a joint project funded by the South Robertson Neighborhood Council and the Hami High Environmental Club in 2009. It is maintained by community members and Hamilton High School students.
In 1932, its attendance boundaries extended as far north as Mulholland Highway.[10] In fall 2007, some neighborhoods zoned to Hamilton were rezoned to Venice High School.[11]
Demographics
As of 2011-2012
- American Indians/Alaska Natives 1%
- Asian 4%
- Filipino 1%
- Pacific Islander 5%
- Black 28%
- Hispanic/Latino 37%
- White 25%
- Gifted and talented 23%
- Students with disabilities 11%
- English learners/ESL 10%
- Reclassified fluent/English proficient 29%
- Economically disadvantaged 43%
- Students entering and leaving 19%
Small Learning Communities
Hamilton High is divided into six "small learning communities," or SLCs," which coordinate their own curricula and staff. They are:
- Academy of Music and Performing Arts
- Humanities Magnet, established in 1981
- CAA (Communication Arts Academy)
- Global Studies
- BIT (Business & Interactive Technology)
- MSM (Math Science Medical)
During the 2008/2009 school year, the L & M (Leadership & Management) was eliminated and the students were placed in the four remaining non-magnet SLCs.
Academy of Music and Performing Arts
The Music Academy gained national attention in June of 2002 when the Disney Channel premiered the reality TV show Totally in Tune, which chronicled members of the Academy's Symphony Orchestra.
The Music Academy is a Grammy-recognized school.
Co-curricular activities
Hamilton's school newspaper is called The Federalist, a reference to and the original name of The Federalist papers initiated and largely written by Alexander Hamilton. The Federalist has been archived by the Hamilton High Alumni Association.
The Humanities Magnet operates an editorial called "Die WeltanshauunG" ("World View").
Neighborhoods zoned to Hamilton
Keystone-Mentone complex, a student family housing facility of the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), is zoned to Hamilton.[12][13] Rose Avenue Apartments was previously zoned to Hamilton, but was rezoned to Venice High School in 2007.[14][15]
Feeder schools
Palms Middle School, Webster Middle School and Marina Del Rey Middle School feed into Hamilton. Louis Pasteur JHS (now LACES), fed some of its graduates to Hamilton.
Notable alumni
- Wil-Dog Abers, singer, Ozomatli
- Laila Ali, women's boxing champion[16]
- Fiona Apple, singer-songwriter (sophomore year only)[17]
- Stephen Baker, wide receiver for the 1989 Super Bowl champion New York Giants [18]
- Frank Bank, played "Lumpy" in the TV series Leave It To Beaver
- Karen Bass, representative of California's 37th congressional district and former Speaker of the Assembly[19][20]
- Howard Berman (1959), formerly representative of California's 28th congressional district; chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee[21][22]
- Albert Boime, author and academic historian
- Lizzy Caplan, actress
- Warryn Campbell, music producer, Grammy winner Warryn Campbell
- Reeve Carney, singer-songwriter and actor [23]
- David Cassidy,pop star, actor (attended, didn't graduate)[24]
- Billy Childs, pianist/composer
- Julian Coryell, guitarist, singer-songwriter, producer
- Jackie Cruz, actress[25]
- Michael Dates, CFO, William Morris Agency[26]
- Kaitlin Doubleday, actress[27]
- Eligh né Eligh Nachowitz, rapper
- Mike Elizondo, bassist and producer[28]
- Evan Freed, attorney, photographer of Robert F. Kennedy presidential campaign, 1968
- William Ginsburg (c:a 1961), attorney who represented Monica Lewinsky during investigations into her relationship with President Clinton
- Brian Austin Green, actor
- Joel Grey né Joel David Katz (1950), singer actor[29]
- Alex Hannum, basketball player for USC, coach of two NBA championship teams, member of Basketball Hall of Fame
- Rita Hayworth née Margarita Carmen Cansino, iconic actress[30]
- Jordan Hill, singer
- Emile Hirsch, actor[31]
- Anna Homler, visual, performance and vocal artist
- J. Hoberman, film critic
- Alex Hoffman-Ellis, football linebacker
- Nipsey Hussle, rapper
- Sikivu Hutchinson, author and feminist educator
- Greg Johnson (game designer) (1977) - creator of the ToeJam & Earl and Starflight games
- Adam Kirsch, author, journalist, critic
- Paul Koretz, City of Los Angeles Council member representing the 5th District, and former Assemblyman (California's 42nd Assembly District)
- Shia LaBeouf, actor
- Abe Laboriel, Jr., drummer[28]
- Michele Lee, Tony and Emmy-nominated singer, actress
- Olympia LePoint, author and rocket scientist
- Alex D. Linz, actor
- Tommy "Tiny" Lister, actor
- Jeff Long, bass player Wasted Youth (American band)
- Darris Love, actor
- Peanuts Lowrey, baseball player
- Rod Martin, NFL linebacker for the Los Angeles Raiders
- Al Michaels (1962), sportscaster
- Warren Moon, NFL Hall of Fame quarterback
- Walter Mosley (1970), author[32]
- Bill Mumy, actor
- Murs, rapper
- Marc Norman, Academy Award-winning screenwriter
- Omarion, R&B singer
- Mimi Page, recording artist, songwriter, producer, composer
- Norman J. Pattiz, founder Westwood One, nation's largest radio network
- Randall Park, actor known for The Interview and Fresh Off the Boat
- Paula Patton, actress[33]
- Michelle Phillips, actress, singer
- Kyla Pratt, actress
- Michael Preece, film and television director, script supervisor, producer, and actor
- Ariel Rechtshaid, music producer, composer, musician
- Nikki Reed, actress
- Ben Rich, former director of the Lockheed Skunk Works; father of "stealth technology"
- Robert Ri'chard, actor
- Joni Robbins née Joan Eva Rothman, voice-over actress
- Darren Robinson, guitarist for the pop-rock band Phantom Planet
- Steven Robman (1962), television and theatre director/producer
- Daniel Rossen, guitarist, singer for Grizzly Bear and Department of Eagles
- Will Rothhaar, actor, Listen Up!
- Lynn Schenk (1962), lawyer, politician, U.S. Representative
- Jon Schwartz (drummer) (1974), drummer with singer-songwriter "Weird Al" Yankovic
- Robert Shapiro (1961?), one of the defense lawyers in the O.J. Simpson murder case
- Shade Sheist, recording artist, songwriter, producer, actor[34]
- Joel Siegel (1961?), critic on ABC television, author[35]
- Leigh Steinberg, sports agent
- Stew né Mark Stewart, composer, Tony Award-winning dramatist (Passing Strange)
- Houston Summers, R&B singer [36]
- Lilly Samuels Tartikoff Ballet dancer and philanthropist[37]
- Gwen Verdon (~1943), film and Broadway actress
- Kamasi Washington, jazz saxophonist
- Sidney Wicks, UCLA basketball player and 1971 NBA Rookie of the Year[38]
- John Wilbur, All-American football player at Stanford University, professional football player
- Jess Gonzalez, COO, Know It All Now, Corp.[39]
Filming location
The school has been used for several movies, television shows, and music videos.
TV Shows
- Mr. Novak (all episodes)
- Beverly Hills, 90210 (several episodes)
- CHiPs (couple of episodes)
- Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 (Episode: "Mean Girls...")
- Highway To Heaven (couple of episodes)
- Once and Again (several episodes)
- Our House (several episodes)
- Parker Lewis Can't Lose (several episodes)
- Sister, Sister (several episodes)
- Stu Erwin Show (facade at beginning of each show)
- That's So Raven (several episodes)
- Room 222
- Soap (façade at the beginning of each schoolroom scene)
- Sweet Valley High (All Episodes)
- "Bones" (Episode: "The Teacher In The Books")
- Without a Trace (Episode: "Safe")
- Ringer (several episodes)
- Heathers (TV Show)
Movies
- Freedom Writers
- The Hunter
- Switch (basketball scene filmed in Girls' Gym)
- Revenge of the Petites
- Amityville: The Awakening
- Logan (film)
Music Videos
- "I'm Not Okay I Promise" - My Chemical Romance
- "Just the Girl" - The Click 5
- "Wasting My Life" - The Hippos
- "Stole" - Kelly Rowland
- "Cinderella" - Lil' Romeo
- "Head of My Class" - Scooter ft Chris Brown
- "You're A Jerk" - New Boyz
- "New Perspective" - Panic! At The Disco
- "Im So Cocky" - Alley Kats
- "Tag Em In" - The Ranger$
References
- ↑ The Citizen, June 12, 1931, p. 10, and November 20, 1931, p. 1
- ↑ Los Angeles Times, August 3, 1930, page C2
- ↑ Historic Schools of the Los Angeles Unified School District (March 2002)Historic Schools of the Los Angeles Unified School District
- ↑ CultureNOW - Griffith Observatory: John C. Austin, Frederick M. Ashley, Levin & Associates Architects and Pfeiffer Partners
- ↑ Los Angeles Times, April 26, 1936, page D2
- ↑ Los Angeles Times, April 21, 1937, page A5
- ↑ Arthur George Waidelich (1890 - 1936) - Find A Grave Memorial
- 1 2 http://hamihighalumni.org/wp-content/uploads/federalist/1989/1989.03.24%20Hamilton%20High%20School%20Federalist.pdf
- ↑ http://hamihighalumni.org/wp-content/uploads/federalist/1981/1981.11.25%20Hamilton%20High%20School%20Federalist.pdf
- ↑ The Citizen, January 29, 1932, p. 11.
- ↑ "Proposed Changed to Hamilton High School Area Schools" (PDF). Los Angeles Unified School District (Laschools.org). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
- ↑ "Keystone-Mentone Apartments." University of California Los Angeles. Retrieved on October 2, 2011. "Location: Keystone/Mentone Apartments 3767-3777 Mentone Avenue 3770-3780 Keystone Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90034"
- ↑ "School Finder." Los Angeles Unified School District. Retrieved on October 2, 2011.
- ↑ "Rose Avenue Apartments." University of California Los Angeles. Retrieved on October 2, 2011. "Location: Rose Avenue Apartments 11140 & 11130 Rose Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90034"
- ↑ "Proposed Changed to Hamilton High School Area Schools" (PDF). Laschools.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
- ↑ McQuaid, Peter (December 17, 2000). "BOXER REBELLION". Los Angeles Times Magazine. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
- ↑ Robert Hilburn, "What a Drag It Is Being Young", Los Angeles Times, October 5, 1997.
- ↑ Vacchiano, Ralph (September 26, 2009). "Former Giants 'Touchdown Maker' Stephen Baker still making a difference". New York Daily News. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ↑ "California Assembly District 47". California Assembly. Archived from the original on 2009-06-02. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
- ↑ "Full Biography | Congresswoman Karen Bass". U.S. House of Representatives. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
- ↑ "Howard Berman (D)". The U.S. Congress Votes Database - 113th Congress. The Washington Post. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- ↑ "Committee Member". U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary. Archived from the original on 2007-12-26. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- ↑ Lindell, Karen (2 August 2011). "Spider-Man's Reeve Carney talks about Bono, Edge and his band". @U2. @U2. Retrieved 2011-08-16.
Education: Hamilton Academy of Music, Los Angeles, CA
- ↑ "David Cassidy", San Bernardino County Sun, April 16, 1972.
- ↑ "Jackie Cruz Upped To Regular On ‘Orange Is the New Black’". Deadline.com. April 23, 2015. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
- ↑ "WME Losing CFO Mike Dates". Deadline.com. March 18, 2011. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
- ↑ Patti, Greco (October 7, 2015). "Sisters Kaitlin and Portia Doubleday on "Empire" and "Mr. Robot," Sibling Rivalry, and High School". Cosmopolitan. Retrieved 2016-02-29.
- 1 2 "Chronic Groove - Mike Elizondo Brings Diversity & Soul To Dr. Dre’s Hip-Hop World". Bass Player Magazine. San Bruno, California. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
- ↑ Katz, Mickey (1977). Papa, play for me. Hannibal Coons, foreword by Joel Grey, introduction by Josh Kun. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. p. 105. ISBN 0-8195-6433-8. Retrieved 2011-11-05.
- ↑ "Education for Rita Hayworth". TCMdb. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
- ↑ "Emile Hirsch Biography". Yahoo! Movies. AEC One Stop Group, Inc. Archived from the original on January 2, 2010. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
Education: Paul Revere Middle School, Brentwood, CA, Hamilton High School, Los Angeles, CA
- ↑ "Mystery Writer Remembers His Days at Hamilton High". Los Angeles Times. June 18, 1997. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
Mystery writer Walter Mosley, whose 1990 novel, "Devil in a Blue Dress," was made into a movie starring Denzel Washington, is a 1970 graduate of Hamilton High School.
- ↑ "Paula Patton Is Pregnant Actress", celebrity.rightpundits.com, March 9, 2008
- ↑ The Official Web Site of Shade Sheist
- ↑ Chute, David (July 1, 2007). "Film critic Joel Siegel '65 memorialized in scholarship". UCLA magazine. Los Angeles, California. Retrieved 2014-12-26.
Siegel had in fact edited satirical campus humor magazines at both Hamilton High ("The Iconoclast") and UCLA ("Satyr").
- ↑ "ALL OF HOUSTON'S ARTICLES!". Houston Message Board. Powered by Invision Power Board. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
- ↑ Ashokani Class: Hamilton High School Yearbook (Summer 1970 ed.). 2955 S. Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA: Ashokani Class. 1970. p. 31.
- ↑ Crowe, Jerry. "In time of great change, Sidney Wicks helped UCLA stay the same", Los Angeles Times, March 2, 2009
- ↑ . March 18, 2017 http://knowitalltutors.com] Check
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