Redwood High School (Visalia)

Redwood High School (usually abbreviated as RHS) is a secondary school in Visalia, California, United States. The public high school serves students from the north west section of the city.

Redwood High School
Address
Map
1001 West Main Street

,
93291

Coordinates36°19′46″N 119°18′7″W / 36.32944°N 119.30194°W / 36.32944; -119.30194
Information
TypePublic
Established1955
School districtVisalia Unified School District
PrincipalDr. Brandon Gridiron
Staff103.60 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Number of students2,483 (2022-2023)[1]
Student to teacher ratio23.97[1]
Color(s)Blue and White   
MascotMr. Ranger
NicknameRangers
WebsiteRedwood High School website

The school serves grades 9 through 12. It is one of four traditional, comprehensive high schools administered by the Visalia Unified School District. Its current enrollment numbers about 2470 students. The school is located at 1001 West Main St Visalia, California 93291.

Green Acres Middle School and Ridgeview Middle School feeds into Redwood. Three private schools in the city, Visalia Christian Academy, St. Paul's, and George McCann Catholic School also supply students to Redwood.

Lore

edit
 
Redwood High School

In 1910, Visalia Union High School was constructed in the style of Mission Revival architecture. The name of the school was eventually changed to Visalia Union High School. In 1952, this school served as a junior high school for two years when a new high school, Mt. Whitney, was opened a few blocks to the south. Two years after Mt. Whitney opened, the old Visalia Union High School campus was renamed Redwood High School. Mt. Whitney High School retained the original school colors and mascot of Visalia Union High School, i.e. maroon & white, The Pioneer.[2][3]

On October 29, 1965, the Spanish mission style administration building burned and was considered a total loss, although classes were held in portions of the building throughout the year. Indeed, many students took a short-cut through dangerous, burned out portions of the building for the rest of the 1965 school year. The original academic building survives to this day, although alterations to the windows and corridors were necessary. The administration wing was later rebuilt along with a larger library (the original library is now room 32). The original "Senior Court" was moved, from where the present library and memory lane are now located, to the quad area.

Redwood High School celebrated its 50th Birthday in the 2004-2005 school year. In that same year, the 50th Cowhide game against its cross town rival, Mount Whitney High School, was celebrated at the Mineral King Bowl and televised throughout the California Central Valley.

Campus

edit

Redwood has two separate campuses separated by Giddings Street, however it is connected by a bridge that was built in 1996. The Main Campus is bounded by Main Street on the north, Conyer Street on the east, Mineral King Avenue on the south, and Giddings Street on the west. The Sierra Vista Campus is bounded by Mill Creek on the north, Giddings Street on the east, Mineral King Street on the south, and Dollner Street on the west.

Main Campus

edit

Main Campus houses most of the school's classrooms and facilities, such as the main office, library, swimming pool, and gym. The gym was remolded for a duration of 50 weeks (11.5 months) and was reopened the student body in mid May of 2023 after multiple delays.

Sierra Vista

edit
 
Sierra Vista Campus Entrance

Sierra Vista is mostly made up of math and foreign languages classes. It also includes visual and performing arts, and architecture classes. The Sierra Vista campus is made up of a few portable classrooms, a main building, a theatre, and a baseball diamond. The Sierra Vista Campus was originally Sierra Vista Elementary School, built during The Great Depression and commissioned as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt's "New Deal". The elementary school was later absorbed by Redwood High School. The Rotary Theater is directly connected to the Sierra Vista building and is the home to the Green Acres Little Theater, along with Redwood, Golden West and Mt. Whitney High Schools' productions. .

Annie R. Mitchell Library & Media Center

edit

The Library was named in honor of Annie Rosalind Mitchell in 1989. Annie Mitchell was Dean of Girls at Visalia Union High School.[4]

Today, the Annie R. Mitchell library houses over 25,000 books for the over 2,100 students that use the facility. The library is decorated with 35 flags from around the world, photographs of students dating back to 1900, and a preserved Golden Eagle.

L.J. Williams Theater

edit
 
The L. J. Williams Theater, located on the Redwood High School Campus.

The L.J. Williams Theater was constructed in the 1930s, and has hosted many artistic events, including concerts and plays. It was named for Mr. Lawrence J. Williams, former instructor and principal of Visalia Union High School and the first President of College of the Sequoias.

Mill Creek

edit
 
Mill Creek running along the northernmost part of the Sierra Vista campus

Mill Creek is a creek that runs through the city of Visalia, including both of Redwood's campuses. Starting at the southeast part of the main campus, the creek runs underground until halfway, then it runs along the south campus, dividing the main campus from the Mineral King Bowl, continuing under Giddings Street and finally along the northern edge of the Sierra Vista campus and into Green Acres.

Student body

edit

The school's ethnic composition is 62.2% Hispanic, 24.1% White, 5.95% Asian, 1.13% African-American, and 6.62% "other".[citation needed]

Athletics

edit

Redwood competes in the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), Central Section Division II, East Yosemite League (EYL). Redwood's direct rival is Mount Whitney High School.

The Cowhide Game

edit

The Cowhide is a cross-town rivalry football game held annually against Mt. Whitney High School during late October and is held at the Mineral King Bowl[5]. This game is the last game before advancing into league. The Cowhide game is an annual tradition between the two schools, where the winning high school gains ownership of the cowhide skin to be hung in the winning school's gymnasium for the year[6]. The first Cowhide game was held in 1955[6].

Notable alumni

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "Redwood High". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved November 10, 2024.
  2. ^ "Redwood High School / Homepage". www.vusd.org.
  3. ^ DMI Agency. "ISSUU - December 2013 by DMI Agency". Issuu. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  4. ^ "Annie R. Mitchell Library & Media Center". Archived from the original on 2008-05-18.
  5. ^ "Cowhide Football Game". Redwood Rangers Athletics. Retrieved November 18, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ a b Hassanshahi, Donya (2022-11-01). "The timeline behind each Rival Cowhide Game". Redwood Gigantea. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  7. ^ "Nobel Newspaper Article". stanford.edu. Retrieved 30 July 2015.