Riverside Polytechnic High School is a four-year public high school in Riverside, California, United States, and part of the Riverside Unified School District. The current facility, located on Victoria Avenue, was opened in September 1965; the traditions of the school go back to 1887, then known as the Riverside High School, making Riverside Polytechnic the oldest high school in the city.

History

Girls High School in Riverside, California, c. 1915

Riverside Polytechnic High School traces its heritage from 1887, when the newly formed city of Riverside needed higher education for the community. The first joint elementary and high school's first graduating class in 1890 comprised seven students—four girls and three boys. Eugenie Fuller was its principal. When classes grew too large in 1902, a new co-educational high school building was constructed on Ninth Street between Lemon and Lime Streets, and the original 14th Street building became the Grant School, serving grades 3–8.

In 1910, Riverside High School's enrollment was approximately 500 students, and new facilities were required. In 1911, the genders were separated, creating a Girls High School at the Ninth Street building, and the Polytechnic High School for boys at a newly constructed campus on Terracina Avenue. Fuller continued as principal of the Girls High School, and Mr. J.E. McKown was appointed principal of the Riverside Polytechnic High School.

In 1916, the Polytechnic High School began offering postgraduate classes. The Riverside Junior College District was formed in 1920, and the Riverside Junior College moved out of the high school to an adjacent property.

World War I brought changes to both high school campuses. The earlier enrollment explosion waned as young men joined the armed forces. In 1924, the school board created a junior high school level and consolidated the senior high schools into one co-educational school. A new Applied Arts Building provided Home Economics and "other facilities for the girls."[citation needed] The old Girls High School now served as a Girls Junior High School, while the Boys Junior High School was located at the old Grant School. 1924–25 saw the Junior College and the Senior High School with growing enrollments, and so provided separate administrations for each. There were 202 seniors in 1924.[citation needed]

During World War II, many Poly girls worked with a federal government–sponsored group called the High School Victory Corps. The girls helped make bandages and other needed items, or worked in essential industries after school. All who took part in these activities were volunteers. In 1944, the Victory Corps was discontinued at Poly.

In the 1940s, there was a tradition that each incoming class at the school would be given an unflattering nickname that would remain with the class until their graduation. For example, the class of 1951 was dubbed the "Geeks" and the class of 1953 was the "Orts".[failed verification]

In 1956, double sessions at Poly were needed until a second high school, Ramona High, could be built. As high school enrollment continued to grow, it was evident that a third high school would be needed in Riverside. In 1960, a new high school, Rubidoux, shared the Poly campus until its campus could be completed in 1961. In 1965, Poly separated from the junior college campus and a site on the corner of Central and Victoria Avenues was built, along with a high school on Third Street and Chicago Avenue, named North High. Both high schools opened their doors in September 1965, with the Victoria site keeping the traditional name of Riverside Polytechnic High School. Since that time, Poly High School classes have taken place on the present site.

Riverside Polytechnic High School is home to one of the original, still active Army Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC) units, established in 1917 and was originally called the Poly High Cadet Corps. It is the oldest JROTC program west of the Mississippi River, and second oldest in the United States. In 1970 it was among the first JROTC units to offer a girls program.

There were 51 young men making up the Class of 1916, known as the "Stags of 1916". There were 18 faculty members. This class was the first to complete the four-year course offered in the new building.

Notable alumni

AlumnusClassFieldNotability
Members of The Misunderstood (George Phelps, Rick Moe, Greg Treadway, Rick Brown, Steve Whiting, Glenn Ross Campbell)1964 (est)MusicOne of the earliest bands on the psychedelic rock scene of the 1960s. Moved to London very early in career, forced to disband due to Brown's draft notice.
Neil LeVang1945 (est)MusicGuitarist most well known for song "Ghost Riders in the Sky" performed on The Lawrence Welk Show, along with 42 other titles featured in Hollywood films.
Hakim Akbar1998SportsFootball linebacker drafted by the New England Patriots
Austin Barnes2008SportsMajor League Baseball (MLB) player, Los Angeles Dodgers, 2020 and 2024 World Series Champion
Bobby Bonds1964SportsMajor League Baseball (MLB) player, 3-time All-Star
Lamont Butler2020SportsBasketball player
Larry Christiansen1974SportsChess Grandmaster, US chess champion 1980, 1983, 2002 First junior high school student to win the National High School Championship.
Tyler Clary2007SportsSwimmer who won silver medal at 2009 World Aquatics Championships, three silvers at 2010 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships and gold medal in 2012 London Olympics.
Marcella Craft1893MusicInternational operatic soprano
Coby Dietrick1967SportsProfessional basketball
John Gabbert1927LawAssociate Justice of the California Court of Appeals
Walter A. Gordon1914 (est)GovernmentFirst All-American at UC Berkeley, first African American graduate of Boalt Hall, Governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands, Federal District Judge
Sharon Jordan1978Film and TVActress, recurring role on Disney's The Suite Life of Zack & Cody
Lorenz Larkin2004SportsWrestler and MMA fighter
Ben H. Lewis1921 (est)GovernmentMayor of Riverside from 1965 to 1978
Jake Marisnick2009SportsMajor League Baseball (MLB) player, Houston Astros, 2017 World Series Champion
Cloyd Marvin1908 (est)Educationpresident of George Washington University
Rex Mays1931 (est)SportsAuto racer, 1940 and 1941 national champion, four-time pole winner at Indianapolis 500, member Motorsports Hall of Fame of America, National Sprint Car Hall of Fame, Riverside Sports Hall of Fame
Cheryl Miller1982SportsUSC basketball player, College Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, WNBA coach, and commentator
Reggie Miller1983SportsUCLA and NBA player, Olympic gold medalist, Basketball Hall of Famer, commentator
Donnie Murphy2001SportsMLB player
Greg Myers1984SportsMLB player
Paul Oglesby1956SportsFootball player
Bill Parsons1966SportsFormer Major League Baseball pitcher for Milwaukee Brewers and Oakland Athletics
Miné Okubo1930 (est)ArtsArtist and writer
Lauren Potter2010TV and governmentActress, played Becky Johnson, a cheerleader with Down syndrome, on TV series Glee. In 2011, she was appointed by President Obama to the President's Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities.
Jo-Jo Reyes2003SportsMLB pitcher
Bob Rule1962 (est)SportsNBA All-Star center
Herman O. Ruhnau1928ArchitecturePostmodern architect
William F. Sharpe1951EconomicsWinner of 1990 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, helped develop Capital asset pricing model, part of Modern portfolio theory. Also known for Sharpe ratio.
Mel Streeter1950SportsCollege basketball player and Seattle architect.
Jacob Webb2012SportsProfessional baseball pitcher for the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Angels, and Baltimore Orioles
Ray Lyman Wilbur1892GovernmentMedical doctor, Stanford University president, 31st United States Secretary of the Interior
Bert Williams1892Vaudeville"Foremost Colored Comedian"
Cynthia Woodhead1982Sports1978 world champion swimmer; 1984 Olympic silver medalist in 200m freestyle
Alan Yang1999Film and TVScreenwriter, producer, director known for Parks and Recreation, Master of None

Notable instructors

  • Edmund Jaeger – noted naturalist, his first zoology class in 1921 had three students

External links

33°57′06″N 117°22′09″W/33.95167°N 117.36917°W/ 33.95167; -117.36917