Aviation High School (California)
Aviation High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
2025 Manhattan Beach Blvd. Redondo Beach, California 90278 | |
Coordinates | 33°53′15″N 118°22′43″W / 33.8874°N 118.3785°WCoordinates: 33°53′15″N 118°22′43″W / 33.8874°N 118.3785°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Opened | 1957 |
Closed | 1982 |
Principal |
Hob Ulhs (1957–1966) |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | approx 1700 (1982) |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Black and Orange |
Mascot | The Falcon |
Newspaper | Jet Stream |
Yearbook | Talon |
Aviation High School (Aviation, AHS, Avi-Hi) was a secondary school located in Redondo Beach, California which was in operation from 1957 to 1982. The school was located at the corner of Manhattan Beach Boulevard and Aviation Boulevard (which runs north to the Los Angeles International Airport). Their athletic teams were known as the Falcons and the school colors were black and orange.
Because of mushrooming growth in the South Bay, Los Angeles beach communities (Manhattan Beach, Redondo Beach, and Hermosa Beach), the school was built in 1957 (at a cost of 4 million dollars) by the then "South Bay Union High School District" which has today broken into the Redondo Beach Unified School District and the Manhattan Beach Unified School District; the district included two other high schools: Redondo Union High School and Mira Costa High School. Other proposed names for the school were Pilot George High, Will Rogers High, Kittyhawk High and—the second runner-up—Aileen S. Hammond High.
Aviation High School served students from both Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach. At its construction, Aviation's facilities—largely single-story buildings radiating out from a central quad—were considered "ultra-modern". In the late 1960s, a large modern auditorium was added to the campus.
School closure
Because of budgetary constraints in the early 1980s, in part due to California Proposition 13 (1978), the "South Bay Union High School District" decided in November 1981 to close one of its three area high schools, but promised teachers and administrators that they would not lose their jobs. Savings were projected at $1 million in maintenance costs. After much deliberation (via a 21-member citizen's committee) and several public forums, the district decided in April 1982 to close Aviation.
Many in the South Bay community saw this decision as unsound (closure would result in overcrowding of the two remaining schools and would not be a viable long-term strategy if district enrollment increased; in addition, Aviation had the newest facilities of the three area high schools. Some saw the decision as based on area politics and geography (Redondo and Mira Costa High Schools were more centrally located and better anchored to their historic communities); some accused the decision of being in part motivated by the prospect of selling or leasing the facilities to Aviation High School's large corporate neighbor, the defense and credit-reporting company TRW. For some time after the school's closure, TRW did lease part of the facilities, including the gym, the track and field, and the auditorium. Although, the city still maintained the facilities.
In 1983, Aviation's non-graduating students were sent to Redondo Union High School and Mira Costa High School, depending on their residence location (to avoid overcrowding at Redondo High School, Mira Costa High School's resident limits were extended outside of Manhattan beach to incorporate part of Redondo Beach).
Classrooms of the campus were demolished in 1982, but the theater, gymnasium and track and field were maintained. The site of the campus is now the 14-acre (5.7 ha) "Aviation Park", home to the Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center (with a 1457-seat theater, recently renovated), the Aviation Gymnasium (including a 12,000 sq ft (1,100 m²). and 6,300 sq ft (590 m²). gyms and a 1,221 sq ft (113 m²) dance room) and the Aviation Track & Field, where an artificial grass soccer field is now surrounded by a 440-yard, five-lane, all weather running track using the original curb.
Notable alumni
- Richard Breeden - chairman of U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission
- Bill Caudill - MLB pitcher
- June Fairchild – actress[1]
- Tom Hintnaus — 1976, 1984 Olympic pole vaulter; Calvin Klein model
- Wes Jones - architect
- Allan McCollum — contemporary artist
- Michele Tafoya - sportscaster
- David Vanole - soccer goalkeeper
- Paul Westphal - NCAA and NBA basketball coach
- Gilby Clarke - musician
- Amanda Wyss - Actress; Fast Times at Ridgemont High, A Nightmare on Elm Street
- Lydia Bree - Gymnast (Rhythmic) 1982 U.S. all-around champion and USA Gymnastics Athlete of the Year, alternate for the 1984 Olympic Team.
- Larry Poindexter - Actor; S.W.A.T, American Ninja, General Hospital, JAG
- Tim Green - NCAA Football Quarterback (USC) Pacific-10 Conference Champion, Rose Bowl MVP
See also
References
- ↑ Chawkins, Steve (2015-02-18). "June Fairchild dies at 68; former actress lived on skid row". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2015-03-15.
External links
- reunion site - Annual All Class Reunion held on the last weekend of July
- reunion site - includes pictures of 1982 demolition
- Present-day Aviation Park