
Pueblo Central High School, Pueblo, Colorado
Posted by:
PersonsMD
N 38° 15.221 W 104° 37.517
13S E 532784 N 4234027
Quick Description: Established in 1882 Pueblo Central High School has served the educational needs of the city of Pueblo, Colorado within this great building. Go Wildcats! Located at 216 E. Orman St. Pueblo, Colorado.
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 11/7/2009 5:06:45 AM
Waymark Code: WM7M12
Views: 1
Long Description:Central High School is known as the "School of Heroes," as it is
the alma mater of two recipients of the Congressional Medal of
Honor, Sitter and Crawford, more than any other high school in the
country.
Originally built as part of school district 20 in 1882 this
school is now part of Pueblo Colorado’s school district 60. Pueblo
Central High is home to the oldest continuous football rivalry
which began in 1892 against Centennial High. Since 1950 the schools
have played in what is known as the Bell Game. The winner getting
the right to keep the “victory bell.” The bell is a traveling
trophy that the two schools share with the winner painting the bell
in their school colors and keeping it along with bragging rights
throughout the year. The Central mascot is the Wildcat and their
school colors are Blue and White.
Central High School is constructed out of stone and sand stone
in a late Victorian architectural style and opened in 1883, with C.
W. Parkinson as principal. The next year, Mr. Parkinson was elected
the first superintendent of schools. The first class graduated from
Central High School in 1886. Many members of this class of '86 are
well-known residents of Pueblo. The class was composed of the
following persons: Grace Guernsey, Ralph Jones, Clara McCann, Alice
McDonald, Charles McVay, Harlan Smith, Mable Stonaker, Nannie
Walker and Frank Young.
Manual training was introduced into the school back in 1889, and
Central was the first school west of the Missouri river to
introduce manual training (EG: Wood and Metal shop) as a part of
the curriculum, with the exception of the city of Omaha, where it
was introduced at the same time as in Pueblo.
It must be noted that the building presented here located on
Orman Ave. Is NOT the same building listed on the National Register
of Historic Places. That building is located 3 blocks to the south
east on Pitkin Avenue.
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