Kawagoe Technical High School | |
Native Name: | 埼玉県立川越工業高等学校 |
Type: | Public |
Founder: | Saitama prefectural government |
Established: | 29 April 1908 |
Gender: | co-educational |
Motto: | ,, |
Free Label1: | School code |
Free Text2: | 11138E |
Postalcode: | 350-0035 |
Location: | Kawagoe City, Saitama Prefecture |
Country: | Japan |
is a public co-educational senior high school located in Kawagoe City, Saitama Prefecture, Japan. The high school was founded as the in 1908 by the Saitama prefectural government.
The school is the oldest high school in Saitama Prefecture and has both full-day and part-time courses. Its alumni include the "Father of the Walkman", former President of Sony China Shizuo Takashino. In 2015 students of the school set a Guinness World Record for the "longest distance traveled by a vehicle on a railway track powered by dry cell batteries".
Establishment of the was approved on 7 May 1907 and the initial course was a three-year for children aged 12 to 15 years old. The school officially opened on 29 April 1908 with capacity for 100 students in its dyeing and weaving course.[1] A design course was subsequently added in 1912.
In April 1918 the school's name was changed to . A two-year preparatory course was established in April 1919 with capacity for 80 students, however it was abolished in 1921. A the same time, the regular courses became five years in length and an elective course was established.[1]
The school's name was changed to on 1 April 1937. Applied chemistry and architecture courses were added in 1941 and 1942 respectively, increasing the school's total enrolment to 470. The school's current name was adopted in April 1948.[1]
In April 1987 the textile engineering course was renamed as the textile design course and became coeducational. In April 1991 the industrial chemistry, architecture, mechanical and electrical courses also became coeducational.[1]
On 3 November 2015 students from the school, in collaboration with Panasonic, set a Guinness World Record for the "longest distance traveled by a vehicle on a railway track powered by dry cell batteries". A train weighing more than one ton was powered by 600 dry cell batteries and travelled a distance of 22.6 km along the Chokaisanroku Line in Akita Prefecture.[2]