- Source: Miami Senior High School
Miami Senior High School, also known as Miami High School, is a public high school located at 2450 SW 1st Street in Miami, Florida, and operated by Miami-Dade County Public Schools. Founded in 1903, it is one of the oldest high schools in Miami-Dade County. The school building is famous for its architecture and is a historic landmark. Miami Senior High School has a rich alumni base, with many graduates of the high school going on to varied, prominent careers. The high school originally served the earliest settling families of Miami in the first half of the 20th century. By the late 1960s, with an increase in Miami's population, its student body grew at a fast pace.
History
Miami Senior High School was established in 1903 and was the first high school in what is now Miami-Dade County. Originally, high school classes took place in Miami's first schoolhouse, a two-story frame structure that was built in 1898 on what is now NE 1st Avenue, between 3rd and 4th Streets. This building, considered temporary, was a one-story frame bungalow addition built directly behind the existing schoolhouse. It opened its doors on September 18, 1905, with 29 girls and 20 boys in attendance.
In 1909, the school board decided to build a new schoolhouse to again house all grammar and high school students together. In 1911, a new three-story concrete schoolhouse opened its doors. The original one-story high school building was moved to SW 12th Street and 1st Avenue, repainted, and opened as the Southside Elementary School. After a new Southside Elementary School was constructed in 1914, the original high school building fell into decades of neglect, operating as a boarding house for 90 years. It was "discovered" in 1983 by a local historian and, in January 2003, was moved to its current location in Southside Park, where it has since been renovated and opened as a community center.
Miami Senior High School's current building is its fourth home. The school board selected a fifteen-acre campus in the middle of what was then a pine forest. Groundbreaking occurred early in 1926, but due to the Great Miami Hurricane of 1926, the school's opening was delayed. Finally finished in 1928, the building was designed in a Spanish Mediterranean style with Moorish and Byzantine details by Richard Kiehnel of Kiehnel and Elliott, one of the great early Miami architects. He gave the school an impressive entrance off Flagler Street "of three arched portals befitting a Gothic cathedral," according to the American Institute of Architects' Miami architecture guide. The building is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
1968 was a significant year for Miami Senior High School. Structural changes were made to accommodate a newly installed air conditioning system that closed off the building's high ceilings. The original windows on the building were sealed with bricks before the completion of the work, and students suffered in hot classrooms for a large portion of the year. This was also the year of the major Florida statewide teachers' strike, which caused students’ classes to be in chaos due to having many newly hired substitute teachers, while their regular teachers walked picket lines for weeks.
Demographics
Located in the Little Havana neighborhood, the school was founded in 1903. Since the late 1960s, the high school has traditionally had a Cuban-American majority. Today, a growing number of students are of Central American descent, reflecting demographic changes in Little Havana since the 1990s.
As of 2013, Miami Senior High School is 94% Hispanic (primarily Cuban, Honduran, Guatemalan, and Salvadorean), 3% White (non-Hispanic), and 3% Black.
By the 1950s, a large Jewish minority had developed at Miami Senior High School, and Jews made up the majority of the students in some advanced-level classes. During that decade some Jewish students were in the attendance zone for Coral Gables Senior High School but were instead sent to Miami High; this was especially the case with girls, as many high-status girls' clubs at Coral Gables High did not admit Jews. A patio called "Little Jerusalem" or "LJ" (initially "Little Israel" in the 1950s) was where Jewish students socialized.
In 1984, the student newspaper declared Spanglish the official language of Miami Senior High School. Then, like today, most students at the school spoke fluent Spanish and English. 69% of the school's students graduate, and it has an overall dropout rate of 4%.
Historic architectural restoration
Beginning in 2010, Miami Senior High School underwent a four-year historic restoration, renovation, and remodeling project at a cost of approximately $55 million. Project architect Thorn Grafton of Zyscovich Architects, who is the grandson of Miami Beach pioneering architect Russell Pancoast, was one of the people who undertook the renovation project. Completed in April 2014, the project did away with the dropped ceilings that had accommodated an old air conditioning system and restored the original high ceilings and decorative cast-stone vent screens in the halls. It also reopened the original second-story arcade, removed an office expansion that had blocked part of the courtyard, and restored the original 14-foot arched windows and steel-trussed cathedral ceiling in the old library (now a media center).
Notable alumni
Rudy Árias - former major league baseball catcher and coach.
Desi Arnaz - bandleader, actor, TV producer, star of I Love Lucy
Atari Bigby - NFL, Green Bay Packers
Steve Blake - Former NBA player, did not graduate
Eddie Brown - NFL player
Jeff Coopwood - Emmy-nominated actor, broadcaster and singer
John Dasburg - CEO of Burger King
Jim Dooley - NFL head coach and player, Chicago Bears
Allen Edwards - college basketball player and coach
Doug Edwards - NBA player, Atlanta Hawks
Willy Falcon - a former drug kingpin, one of the most significant cocaine trafficking organizations in South Florida history. did not graduate
Robert L. Floyd - former Mayor of Miami, State Representative, Judge, and Miami Sheriff
Ileana Garcia - Member of the Florida Senate
Luis Garcia - MLB player, Baltimore Orioles
Christopher George (1929–1983) - film and television actor, star of The Rat Patrol and U.S. Marine
Edmond J. Gong - first Asian American elected to Florida House and Senate
Bob Graham - Governor of Florida and U.S. Senator
Philip L. Graham - publisher of Washington Post
Anthony Grant - head basketball coach, University of Dayton
Carol Hanson - Florida State Representative (1982-1994) and Mayor of Boca Raton (1995-2001)
Udonis Haslem - NBA player, Miami Heat; 3-time NBA champion
Steve Hertz - MLB player and Israel Baseball League manager
Lindy Infante - NFL head coach, Green Bay Packers and Indianapolis Colts
Jamaal Jackson - NFL center
Andre Johnson - NFL wide receiver, Houston Texans and Tennessee Titans
Lonnie Johnson – NFL player
Donald Justice - Pulitzer Prize-winning poet
Veronica Lake - actress, star of such 1940s films as Sullivan's Travels and This Gun for Hire
Mike Levy - founder and former CEO of SportsLine.com, now CBSSports.com
Marquand Manuel - NFL player, defensive coordinator of Atlanta Falcons
Sal Magluta former drug kingpin and powerboat racer who, along with his partner Willy Falcon, operated one of the most significant cocaine trafficking organizations in South Florida history. did not graduate
Frank Martin - head basketball coach, UMass
Delrish Moss - Miami law enforcement veteran appointed as Police Chief of Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis known for racial unrest
Gardnar Mulloy - tennis player, 4-time U.S. Open doubles champion
Fred Ottman - professional wrestler
Alfred Browning Parker - architect
Roscoe Parrish - NFL wide receiver, San Diego Chargers
Juan Pena, MLB player, Boston Red Sox
Ed Roberts - designed first commercially successful personal computer in 1975
Mandy Romero- MLB player (San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Colorado Rockies)
Al Rosen (1924-2015) - MLB player, 4-time All-Star, 1948 World Series champion, 1953 MVP
Mike Schemer (1917–1983) - MLB player
Robert L. Shevin - Former Florida Attorney General, Member of the Florida Senate and Florida House of Representatives; 3rd District Court of Appeals Judge
David A. Siegel - businessman
George Smathers - U.S. Senator
Bob Stinson - MLB player for six teams
Mario Valdez - MLB player (Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics)
Brent Wright - professional basketball player in Europe
Felix Semper - World renowned Artist/Sculptor stretchable paper sculptures, graduated in 1983
In pop culture
Movies including The Substitute and Porky's were filmed at MHS, as well as the music videos for Gloria Estefan and NSYNC's "Music of My Heart" and Drake's "God's Plan".
See also
Education in the United States
References
External links
Miami Senior High School website
Miami High School website (mhs.dadeschools.net) Archive index at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- LeBron James
- Zac Efron
- Jeff Bezos
- Bam Adebayo
- Don Johnson
- Renita Holmes
- Bob McAdoo
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- Miami Senior High School
- South Miami Senior High School
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- Miami Palmetto Senior High School
- Miami Northwestern Senior High School
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- Southwest Miami Senior High School
- North Miami Senior High School
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- Miami Central Senior High School