Castlemont High School Explained
37.7597°N -122.1631°WCastlemont High School is a public high school in Oakland, California, United States, originally known as East Oakland High School. It is part of the Oakland Unified School District. The Castlemont name was selected by a vote of the students.
Castlemont High School was founded in 1929 in a medieval-style building. The architecture inspires many of the school traditions, such as the sports teams being named "Knights" and "Crusaders" and the school newspaper Ye Castle Crier. The motto is "Build on and make thy castles high and fair, rising upward to the skies."
Its Basketball teams in, 1969, 1976, & 1979 were winners of the Tournament of Champions (T.O.C.), formerly the northern California championships, and its track team in 1975 Maurice Glass held high school indoor sprint record. In 1983, Derrick Adams took first place in the 130 lbs wrestling California State Championship, the only Oakland Section person to ever place first in his weight class.
Former School Choir, "The Castleers", whose members in the 1970s toured the world performing a variety of songs that included R&B and gospel.
Castlemont Community of Small Schools
For an eight-year period, from 2004 to 2012, the large school housed three separate smaller schools called the Castlemont Community of Small Schools. The smaller schools were known by the names:
- Castlemont Leadership Preparatory High (10–12)
- Castlemont Business and Information Technology School (10–12) (CBITIS)
- East Oakland School of the Arts (10–12)
- Freshman Prep Academy (FPA)
A similar smaller school experiment was going on at the Fremont Federation of High Schools.[1]
The school opened back under the reunified name "Castlemont High School" in the fall of 2012.[2]
Alumni
Notable alumni of Castlemont Senior High School include:
- Carole Ward Allen, former BART director and Oakland port commissioner
- Charlie Brown (b. 1948), former NFL wide receiver for the Detroit Lions[3]
- Kali Muscle, American actor, author, bodybuilder, and entertainer
- Randy Sparks, the Christie Minstrels
- Larry Graham, former bass player with Sly and the Family Stone
- Steve Howard, former MLB player
- Fred Korematsu, Japanese Internment protester
- Leroy Reams, Major League Baseball player for Philadelphia Phillies
- Joe Morgan (1943–2020), baseball Hall of Famer, class of 1962[4]
- Clifford T. Robinson (class of 1977), NBA Small forward
- Fred Silva (b. 1927), NFL official from 1968 to 1988, referee for Super Bowl XIV[5]
- Steve Reeves (1926–2000), class of 1944 Most famous for his movie role of "Hercules", famous bodybuilder and actor.
- Gary Pettis (b. 1958), Major League Baseball player, current first base coach of the Houston Astros
- June Pointer (1953–2006), American Pop/R&B singer, the Pointer Sisters
- Richard "Dimples" Fields (1941–2000), American R&B and soul singer
- Raphael Saadiq (b. 1966), American R&B singer[6]
- Betty Reid Soskin, oldest National Park Ranger serving the United States[7]
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Oakland Unified School District High School Courses and Programs: Course Catalog 2011-2012 . www.ousd.org . 12. 19 August 2024.
- Web site: Castlemont High School / Overview . 2014-02-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140220150547/http://www.ousd.k12.ca.us/castlemont . www.ousd.k12.ca.us. 2014-02-20.
- News: Brown Leads NAU Receiving . 19 August 2024 . Arizona Daily Sun . 23 October 1969.
- Web site: Joe Morgan . 2014-07-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080515144754/http://www.bashof.org/inducteebios/jmorgan.htm . wwww.bashof.org. 2008-05-15 . dead.
- News: Petersen. Justin. Retired NFL Referee Fred Silva Dead at 77 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120205011500/http://www.evergreentimes.com/121704/sports.htm . 2012-02-05. Evergreen Times . 17 December 2004.
- News: Bodenheimer . Rebecca . Tony! Toni! Toné! Celebrates Three Decades in Music . 19 August 2024 . East Bay Express . 4 July 2018.
- News: Betty Reid Soskin, Groundbreaking Park Ranger, to Have East Bay Middle School Renamed in Her Honor. 24 June 2021 . 2021-06-24. KQED. en-us.