Watsonville High School Explained

Watsonville High School
Rival:North County
Address:250 E. Beach Street Watsonville
Location:Watsonville, California 95060
Type:Public
Established:1892
District:Pajaro Valley Unified School District
Principal:Joseph Gregorio
Grades:9 - 12
Athletics:Football, Cross Country, Tennis, Golf, Cheer, Volleyball, Basketball, Soccer, Wrestling, Baseball, Softball, Swimming, Track and Field, Lacrosse
Mascot:Willy the Wildcat
Website:https://www.watsonvillehs.net/index.html

Watsonville High School is a high school located in Watsonville, Santa Cruz County, California, and is part of the Pajaro Valley Unified School District. The school mascot is Willy the Wildcat. The school colors are black and gold. Watsonville High School is a large school with over 2,000 students and staff, making it the largest school in the Pajaro Valley Unified School District.

History

Watsonville High School was originally a two-year high school course which was connected to a grammar school. The program met the standard for college entry requirements, as well as teaching Latin and Greek. In 1891, the course was extended to three years. There was an increased need for a separate building, so the district passed a bond measure to build a new two-story building, designed by W.H. Weeks, on the corner of Third and Marchant Streets.

On November 8, 1901, seven years after it was built, the school building was destroyed in a fire. In December, a second bond measure was proposed to rebuild the school, but it failed. In February, the school district was able to pass a smaller bond to hire Weeks to build a "Spanish style" school on the foundations of the original building.[1]

Sports

Their most recent sports rival is with Pajaro Valley High School, which is also located in Watsonville. Watsonville High's long-time rival is Aptos High School; the football game between the two schools is known as the "Black and Blue Bowl." A new rival in many sports, is North Monterey County High School.

Notable alumni

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Koch, Margaret. Going to School in Santa Cruz County: A History of the County's Public School System. 1989.