San Francisco Polytechnic High School
San Francisco Polytechnic High School | |
---|---|
San Francisco , United States | |
Information | |
Type | Public secondary |
Established | 1884 |
Closed | 1973 |
School district | San Francisco Unified School District |
Grades | 9–12 |
Campus type | Urban |
Color(s) | red and black |
Mascot | Parrot |
San Francisco Polytechnic High School was a public secondary school in
History
The school opened in 1884 as the Commercial School, on
In the 1960s an influx of black families led to an option system under which many white parents elected to send their children instead to
Squatters occupied the buildings in the 1980s; in 1989 all except the two gyms were demolished and replaced by the Parkview Commons
Extracurricular activities
The San Francisco Polytechnic football team won numerous trophies from the 1920s to the 1950s.[8] More than 50,000 people were at Kezar Stadium for the 1928 city championship game with the school's traditional rival Lowell High School, the highest attendance for a high school football game in northern California.[3] In November 2020, the Polytechnic Alumni Association offered a reward of up to $5,000 for the return of approximately 50 sports trophies that went missing after the school closed.[8]
Notable alumni
- Luis Walter Alvarez, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Warner Baxter, Academy Award winning Best Actor, 1928
- Tad Dorgan, cartoonist
- Paul Desmond, musician
- George Fenneman, announcer[6]
- Janet Gaynor, actress and painter[9]
- Edward Ginzton, physicist[10]
- Rube Goldberg, cartoonist
- Louis Macouillard, artist[11]
- Alice Marble, International Tennis Hall of Fame
- Robert S. Pastorino, diplomat
- Merl Saunders, musician[12]
- Barry Shabaka Henley, actor[13]
- Rudy Rintala (1909-1999), four-sport star athlete at Stanford University during the 1930s[14]
- George Seifert, former NFL coach[15]
- Bob St. Clair, former San Francisco 49ers player and Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee[16]
- Martha Wash, singer[17]
- Caspar Weinberger, former Secretary of Defense[18]
- Victor Willis, Village People lead singer
See also
References
- ^ a b c Gaar, Greg; et al. (July 2005) [September 1984]. "The Rise and Fall of Polytechnic High School Part 1: 'The Finest School in San Francisco'" (PDF). Perennial Parrot. 18 (1). "Our Gang" Polytechnic High School Alumni Association: 1–2.
- ^ "Polytechnic High School Gymnasiums, 639 and 755 Frederick Street, Built 1929 and 1937". Noehill: San Francisco Points of Historical Interest. Retrieved December 28, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e Bevk, Alex (January 11, 2013). "Then & Now: Polytechnic High School's Gynmasiums [sic] Still Standing Strong". Curbed San Francisco. Vox.
- ^ a b c Gaar, Greg; et al. (December 2005) [September 1984]. "The Rise and Fall of Polytechnic High School Part 2: 'The Death of a Great High School'" (PDF). Perennial Parrot. 18 (2). "Our Gang" Polytechnic High School Alumni Association: 1–3.
- ^ a b Wagner, Venise (October 4, 1996). "Poly High alums seek spirit of '68". San Francisco Examiner – via San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ a b "$1,500 reward offered in theft of cornerstone". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. December 9, 1987. p. A2.
- ^ Polytechnic Alumni Association
- ^ a b Williams, Michael (November 11, 2020). "Alumni from S.F.'s old Polytechnic High School offer up to $5,000 for missing trophies". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ISBN 0-870-00128-0.
- ISBN 0-309-10389-4.
Less than four years later he graduated from San Francisco's Polytechnic High School....
- ^ "Louis Macouillard". FAMSF Explore the Art. 2015-05-08. Retrieved 2017-12-06.
- ^ "San Francisco Musician Merl Saunders Dies at 74". KTVU. 2008-10-24. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07.
But Saunders jammed for decades, starting at San Francisco's Polytechnic High School....
- ^ Vigil, Delfin (2007-06-03). "An acting pioneer". San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ "Rudolph Alexander Rintala," San Francisco Examiner, Dec. 14, 1999, pg. A25.
- ^ "49ers quarterbacks coach thankful to be alive after 1960 plane crash". Contra Costa Times. 2003-11-27.
Marinai, a teammate of George Seifert's at San Francisco Polytechnic High School....
- ISBN 9781613210451.
- ^ Knight, Heather (October 28, 2005). "Johnny Land—students' musical muse". SF Gate. Retrieved July 6, 2019.
- ^ "A Career of Service and History". The Library of Congress Information Bulletin. May 2007.
His early interest in politics is shown by ... items he kept ... during his time as a student at San Francisco Polytechnic High School in the 1930s.
External links
- Welch, Calvin (February 1989). "Sharing a Community: The Story of the Development of the Housing at Polytechnic High School" (PDF).