Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School

32°48′30″N 97°20′14″W / 32.8082°N 97.3372°W / 32.8082; -97.3372

Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School
Address
Map
1411 Maydell Rd.

,
TX
76106

United States
Information
TypeHigh School
Established1903 (1952, DH-J)
School districtFort Worth Independent School District
Teaching staff71.41 (FTE)[1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment983 (2018–19)[1]
Student to teacher ratio13.77[1]
Color(s)Scarlet and black    
MascotEagle
NicknameDHJ

Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School is a school in Fort Worth, Texas, United States which serves grades 9 through 12. The school is a part of the Fort Worth Independent School District. The current principal is Manuel De La Cruz.

The school logo is the eagle, the school colors are black and scarlet, and the school motto is "We are Diamond Hill."

History

edit

Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School opened in 1904 as Diamond Hill School. In 1906, its campus moved from 28th Street to Hutchinson and Oscar. The first graduating class comprised 3 students who graduated in 1913.

 

In 1924, Diamond Hill School became part of the Fort Worth Public School System. The school mascot was changed to the eagle from the hilltopper in 1927. Students were relocated to North Side High School between 1931 and 1933 while the school was renovated.

 
 

In 1952–1971, the original buildings were used as an elementary school as the new campus located on Maydell was opened. The original Diamond Hill School buildings were torn down in 1971.

 

In 2006, it was placed 95th on Newsweek magazine's top 1200 high schools list. In 2021, the men's soccer team went to state for the first time in history. Students also participate in tennis, cross country, football, golf, softball, baseball, track, and powerlifting.

Feeder patterns

edit

Elementary schools that feed into Diamond Hill-Jarvis include Diamond Hill Elementary, Cesar Chavez Elementary, Helbing Elementary, M.H. Moore, and Washington Heights.

W.A. Meacham Middle School feeds into Diamond Hill-Jarvis.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "DIAMOND HILL-JARVIS H S". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
edit