Gibbs High School | |
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Address | |
850 34th Street South St. Petersburg, FL 33711-2208 United States |
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Coordinates | 27°45′41″N 82°40′42″W / 27.76139°N 82.67833°WCoordinates: 27°45′41″N 82°40′42″W / 27.76139°N 82.67833°W |
Information | |
Type | Coed Public High School |
Established | 1927 |
School district | Pinellas County Schools |
Superintendent | Michael Grego |
Principal | Reuben Hepburn |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 989 (July 28, 2013) |
Color(s) | Blue and Gold |
Mascot | Gladiator |
Accreditation | Florida State Department of Education |
Newspaper | The Gibbsonian |
PCCA Colors | Black and White |
BETA Colors | Black and Red |
Website | Gibbs HS website |
Gibbs High School is a public high school of the Pinellas County School District in St. Petersburg, Florida. Gibbs is home to the Pinellas County Center for the Arts (PCCA), Business, Economics, and Technology Academy (BETA) and their television production in Communication Arts. The school is named for Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs, a black man who held Florida state office during the Reconstruction era, serving as Secretary of State in 1868, and State Superintendent of Public Instruction in 1873. Gibbs' current principal is Reuben Hepburn.
Before Gibbs opened in 1927, Pinellas County had no school for blacks past 6th grade. Families wishing for high school education had to enroll in private, mostly church-run black schools. Gibbs became the county's first public secondary school for blacks, occupying an eight-classroom building that cost $49,490 to build. Proms were held at Manhattan Casino.
In 1970, public schools in Florida were finally truly integrated, and whites began attending Gibbs. Gibbs, however, was still primarily black. To assist their integration goals, the district approved the creation of a magnet program at Gibbs, the Pinellas County Center for the Arts, that would instruct those with artistic gifts. In 2004, Gibbs High School was included in the federal grant received by Pinellas County Schools for the establishment of small learning communities (SLCs). Today, the high school is host to smaller learning communities that have curriculum pathways in Communication Arts, Travel & Tourism, Global Studies and a freshmen Renaissance program. The Pinellas County Center for the Arts program offers high-class and one-on-one training with students in varied art fields. The fields include literary theatre, performance theatre, musical theatre, technical theatre, visual arts, dance, instrumental music, and vocal music.