Thomas Jefferson High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
723 Donaldson Avenue , 78201 | |
Coordinates | 29°27′55″N98°32′17″W / 29.46528°N 98.53806°W |
Information | |
School type | Public, High School |
Motto | "In Omni Uno!" |
Founded | 1932 |
School district | San Antonio ISD |
NCES School ID | 483873004368 [1] |
Principal | Gregory Rivers |
Grades | 9th – 12th |
Enrollment | 1,686 [1] (2022-23) |
Student to teacher ratio | 14.40 [1] |
Color(s) | Red, White and Blue |
Nickname | Mustangs |
Newspaper | The Declaration |
Feeder schools | Whittier, LongFellow, Fenwick, Woodlawn |
Website | www |
[2] | |
Thomas Jefferson High School | |
Built | 1932 |
Architectural style | Mission/Spanish Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 83003093 |
RTHL No. | 5470 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | September 22, 1983 [3] |
Designated | June 29, 1983 |
Designated RTHL | 1983 |
Thomas Jefferson High School is a public high school in San Antonio, Texas, United States, 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. [4] For the 2021-2022 school year, the school was given a "B" by the Texas Education Agency. [5]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2016) |
The SAISD school board paid $94,588.75 to buy "Spanish Acres," a 32-acre (13 ha) property, to develop the third high school in San Antonio. Construction began in the fall of 1930 and ended in January 1932. [6] It was built for over $1.25 million. [7]
In 1983 it became a part of the National Register of Historic Places. It was also designated a Texas historic landmark. [7]
The school was designed by the company Adams and Adams. The entrance has two towers of different heights and is designed in the Baroque style. [8] The towers are topped with silver. The school uses wrought-iron balconies and Spanish-tiled roofing. The school has two courtyards, [7] both landscaped, bordered by portales. [9] One courtyard has a hexagonal pond with decorative tiling. [7] Hannibal and Eugene Pianta, an Italian immigrant and his son, [6] decorated the main entrance columns and balconies with cast-stone ornamentation. [7] Jay C. Henry, the author of Architecture in Texas: 1895-1945, stated that the architecture is similar to that of Lubbock High School. [9]
In 1938 the school had an armory, a cafeteria, a drill ground, two gymnasiums, and a theater. [10]
A music facility and the East Wing, a three-story addition, were built at a later time. [7]
Its Moorish/Spanish architecture make it a visually distinct element in what was the old Woodlawn district. [11]
In 1983 Jefferson was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [12] In 1995, it was included in the Local Historic District by the City of San Antonio. [13] In 2010, Jefferson was selected as Grammy Signature Award Winner. [14]
The demographic breakdown of the 1,829 students enrolled in 2012-2013 was:
86.6% of the students were eligible for free or reduced lunch. [2]
In 1938 the school had 2,394 students. At the time over 60% of the students were scheduled to matriculate to universities and colleges. [10] In addition there were 89 teachers, including 56 female teachers. The student-teacher ratio at the time was 25 to 1. [15]
In 1938 the school had an ROTC unit, multiple school-recognized clubs including the girls' pep squad "Lassos", and fraternities and sororities unrecognized by the school. [10] As of 1938 the "Lassos" were made up of 150 female students. [16]
In 1938 the ROTC had 33 student officers, all male; each were allowed to choose a female student to accompany him. [17]
The 1940 Twentieth Century Fox film High School used exteriors and back-projection footage shot at TJHS. [18]
The Jefferson Mustangs compete in the following sports: [19]
Robert Floyd Curl Jr. was an American chemist who was Pitzer–Schlumberger Professor of Natural Sciences and professor of chemistry at Rice University. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996 for the discovery of the nanomaterial buckminsterfullerene, and hence the fullerene class of materials, along with Richard Smalley and Harold Kroto of the University of Sussex.
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Thomas Jefferson High School was a high school in the East New York section of Brooklyn, New York. It was the alma mater of many people who grew up in the Great Depression and World War II and rose to prominence in the arts, literature, and other fields. In 2007, the New York City Department of Education closed the school and broke it into several small schools because of low graduation rates.
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