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South High School (Denver)

South High School
FS17636-303a.jpg
Location
1700 East Louisiana Avenue, Denver, Colorado
Coordinates 39°41′32″N 104°57′57″W / 39.69229°N 104.96585°W / 39.69229; -104.96585Coordinates: 39°41′32″N 104°57′57″W / 39.69229°N 104.96585°W / 39.69229; -104.96585
Information
Type Public
Established 1893
School district Denver Public Schools
Dean Adam Kelsey, Pablo Joucovsky
Principal Kristin Waters Ph.D.
Staff 52
Faculty 70
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1392
Number of students 1392
Color(s)          Purple and white
Athletics 5A
Athletics conference Denver
Mascot Gargoyle/Rebels
Newspaper The Gargoyle
Website

South High School is a high school in the Washington Park neighborhood on the south side of Denver, Colorado, United States. It is part of Denver Public Schools.

In 1893, high school classes were established in two rooms of the Grant school (now Grant Middle School). By 1907, an addition was required because of overcrowding. In January 1925, there were 800 students in the senior high school section and more space was desperately needed. A bond issue was voted into effect in October 1925, and funds for a new school were raised. The cost of construction was $1,252,000; the building was intended to last a century.

1,392 students were enrolled in the 2009–2010 school year.

Using federal government guidelines, 70.55% of the students were eligible for free or reduced-price lunches.

South High School was designed by the architectural firm of Fisher & Fisher in the time's popular Romanesque style. Sculptor Robert Garrison created many of the building's adornments, including the 3 foot (1 meter) tall gargoyle above the building's main entrance; this symbolic protector of South was inspired by a gargoyle at the Italian Cathedral of Spoleto. On either side of the main entrance, bas-relief figures of teachers hold in their hands creatures representing examinations who are attempting to devour students. On the door are friezes of Faculty Row (a scene resembling the Last Supper, with the principal in the center) and Animal Spirits (frolicking student-like creatures).

Although there are some differences, South's Clock Tower is thought to be a replica of the one at Santa Maria in Cosmedin. After the tower's original roof deck began to leak, a State Historical Fund grant was secured to replace the roof and update the electrical work.

Many of the changes to the building have been to subdivide former study halls and repurpose other rooms into usable classroom space. The boys' gym, or North Gym, had a balcony allowing for spectator basketball games, which was removed in the late 1950s and early 1960s with the addition of the auxiliary gym, the girls' locker rooms and the new JROTC offices. In 1964 the southwest wing was added, followed in 1989 by a new gymnasium. This completed an expansion planned before World War II but never realized because of the rationing and shortages due to the war.


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