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Forum: Sam Houston HS | ||||||||||
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Connie Redden Hopper
Class Of '69
Humble Texas Joined: 04/01/09 Posts: 130 View Profile |
Bayou City History Posted Monday, December 13, 2010 07:07 AM New book looks at Houston from 1860 to 1900 | Main | The story of Mt. Houston » March 30, 2010Sam Houston High School (old)
For me, it's a little hard to imagine that there was ever a public high school in downtown Houston. Up until the early 1950s the square block bordered by Austin, Rusk, Caroline and Capitol had long served as a site of education for young Houstonians. In the 1850s, the site was home to the Houston Academy. Decades later, it was home to the Clopper Institute and later sold to the Houston public school system. In 1894, ground was broken on an $80,000 building that came to be known as Central High School. Described as one of the finest high schools in this part of the country, it also attracted negative attention for its incredible cost: $1.9 million when adjusted for inflation. That school burned down in March 1919. Two years later, the building known as Sam Houston High School opened on the property. All of the photos you'll see here are from that era. Famous alumni include Jack Valenti and renowned marksman Joe Bowman. Lyndon Johnson also taught public speaking there beginning in 1930. A 1936 Houston Chronicle article mentions that the school board decided Sam Houston High would be renamed after Dick Dowling. If it had gone through, a new high school on the southwest side would have taken the Sam Houston name. Of course, that never happened. Now, many readers are aware of the Sam Houston High School off Irvington. After it opened in the mid-1950s, the old building became the headquarters for HISD. By the early 1970s, the school district moved out on Richmond and old Sam Houston High was demolished. HISD still owns the property. It comes up whenever locations for a new High School for the Performing and Visual Arts are discussed. But for now, the square block remains a parking lot. The only indication of its historic value is a state marker on the south side of the block.
Posted by J.R. Gonzales at March 30, 2010 11:00 AM Connie Redden69 |
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JOHN (Billy) SPIES
Class Of '71
Joined: 09/01/10 Posts: 2 View Profile |
RE: Bayou City History Posted Tuesday, January 4, 2011 09:08 PM I worked summers for HISD during the late '60s and early '70s. We helped move equipment out of the downtown Sam Houston before it was demolished. It was a grand old building. |
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KATHERINE NEWTON COURTLAND
Class Of '68
Joined: 06/19/09 Posts: 11 View Profile |
Bayou City History Posted Thursday, March 19, 2015 03:26 PM image.jpg My great aunt Lillian Newton Hayward graduated from the old Houston High or Central High, downtown, in 1904. I donated a composite photo of her and the girls drill team from 1904 to the school. Last time I saw it was in a closet of the Houstonette office. Wish I had it back or knew what happened to it. They wore long black Victorian dresses and were known as the "Black Batallion". Attached is a photo of her gold graduation pin that I had made into a charm, it has small turquoise stones and says HHS '04. I was President of the Sam Houston Houstonettes, the drill team in the late 1960's. Most of the girls did not realize what a long, rich history the group had. Later I believe the name was changed to the "Tigerettes". Katherine. Newton Courtland |
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Roger Bradshaw
Class Of '70
Joined: 07/30/14 Posts: 2 View Profile |
RE: Bayou City History Posted Tuesday, October 20, 2015 08:03 AM None of the three pics are visible. Just the name of the pic is all I see. |
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