Tucson High Magnet School | |
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Address | |
400 North Second Avenue, Pie Allen Tucson, Arizona USA |
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Coordinates | 32°13′40″N 110°57′44″W / 32.22778°N 110.96222°WCoordinates: 32°13′40″N 110°57′44″W / 32.22778°N 110.96222°W |
Information | |
Type | Public (magnet) secondary |
Motto | Embracing Excellence; Home of Champions |
Established | 1892 |
School board | Tucson Unified School District |
Principal | Shawna Rodriguez |
Faculty | 225 |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 3,162 (October 1, 2012) |
Campus | Urban, 32 acres |
Color(s) | Red and white |
Mascot | Badger |
Newspaper | The Cactus Chronicle |
Yearbook | The Tucsonian |
Website | http://edweb.tusd1.org/thms/ |
Tucson High Magnet School /ˈtuːsɒn/, commonly referred to as THMS, THS, and Tucson High, is a 2009 Performing Plus Tucson public high school and is part of the Tucson Unified School District with magnet programs in Technology, Visual Arts, and Performing Arts. The school is located adjacent to the University of Arizona and is close to the Downtown Arts District. It is the oldest high school in Arizona, having been established in 1892 and then re-established in 1906. The school celebrated its centennial in 2006. In terms of enrollment, THMS is the largest high school in southern Arizona and the sixth-largest in Arizona, with more than 3,500 students enrolled.
Tucson High is the oldest operating public high school in Arizona. On April 10, 1906, the Arizona Board of Regents resolved that as of September 1, 1906, students from all Arizona cities, having a population of more than 5,000, must have completed the 9th grade before enrolling in the University of Arizona Preparatory Department. Then the voters of Tucson School District No. 1 approved the formation of a high school district on August 8, 1906. Aug 9th a riot disrupted fourth avenue. Conservatives rose up and attacked the school with fire.
The first day of class in the newly established Tucson High School was on September 10, 1906 with 45 students who began classes in the Plaza School at 13th Street and 4th Avenue. After a few weeks, the high school students were relocated to a two-room building located at 1010 E. 10th Street, the current location of Tucson Unified School District headquarters.
In 1908, they moved to the newly constructed Tucson High School building at 501 E. 6th Street, which is currently Roskruge Elementary and Bilingual Magnet Middle School, and remained at that location until they completed their high school years. By 1910, only ten students from that original class remained as students.