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Andress High School

Andress High School
Location
5400 Sun Valley Drive
El Paso, Texas 79924

United States
Coordinates 31°54′38″N 106°25′08″W / 31.91056°N 106.41889°W / 31.91056; -106.41889Coordinates: 31°54′38″N 106°25′08″W / 31.91056°N 106.41889°W / 31.91056; -106.41889
Information
Type Public
Established 1961
School district El Paso Independent School District
Faculty 129.4 (on FTE basis)
Grades 9 to 12
Enrollment 1,992
Student to teacher ratio 15.4
Color(s) Maroon and Gold         
Athletics conference 1-5A
Mascot Golden Eagle
Website

Andress High School is a public high school located on the northeast side of El Paso, Texas. The school serves about 2,000 students in the El Paso Independent School District. It is located in the Sun Valley neighborhood at the intersection of Sun Valley Drive and Mackinaw Street. Andress High is currently the northernmost of EPISD's ten comprehensive high schools, serving the portion of Northeast El Paso between the Franklin Mountains and McCombs Street and north of Woodrow Bean Transmountain Road (Texas Loop 375) west of Girl Scout Way and Fairbanks Drive east of it, up to the New Mexico state line. Virtually all of the northern half of the Andress attendance zone, that is, north of Loma Real Avenue, is undeveloped land, most of it slated for future residential development. A new high school, as yet unnamed, which will serve what is now the portion of the Andress attendance zone north of the Patriot Freeway (US 54) to the New Mexico state line, is in the planning stages, and was originally slated to be built using funding from a 2007 bond issue; however, in 2014 it was decided by the EPISD board of managers that development of the area did not yet justify a new high school and the funds set aside for its construction were reallocated.

Andress High's feeder schools include Charles, Richardson and Terrace Hills Middle Schools; the elementary schools in the Andress feeder pattern include Barron, Bradley, Collins, Fannin, Tom Lea, Newman, and Nixon. Terrace Hills, whose attendance zone extends south of Woodrow Bean Transmountain Road, also graduates into Irvin High.

Andress High was named for local attorney and school board member Theodore A. (Ted) Andress, who was murdered at the El Paso airport by a mentally unbalanced man he had been feuding with just before the school opened in 1961.


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