| Alexander Hamilton High School | |
| Location | |
|---|---|
| Los Angeles, California, United States | |
| Information | |
| Type | High School |
| Established | 1931 |
| Locale | 2955 South Robertson Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90034 34°02′00″N 118°23′23″W / 34.033451°N 118.389667°W |
| Principal | Gary Garcia |
| Grades | A-F System |
| Number of students | 2,154[1] |
| Athletics | Hamilton High School Yankees |
| Mascot | Alex |
| Phone | 310-836-1602 |
| Website | Hamilton Home Page |
Alexander Hamilton High School is a public high school within the Westside of Los Angeles, California, United States. It is in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
Contents |
History
Hamilton High School opened in fall 1931, with Thomas Hughes Elson as the principal. [2] At the time, its attendance boundaries included Culver City[3], and in 1932 they extended as far north as Mulholland Highway.[4]
Early photographs from the school's archives show the campus in its pre-World War II state, with only the main building completed. The photos show dozens of 1920s and 30s cars parked along Robertson Boulevard in front of the school. The bell tower still exists today, but no longer houses a working bell.
Today, there exists Brown Hall (the lab building, named in honor of Jack Brown, a noted electronics instructor), the tech building, the humanities building, the music building, and other structures. There is a large Theater Hall, a cafeteria, two gym buildings, boys' and girls' gym, and a workshop building. Adjacent is a Department of Water and Power building and Cheviot Hills High School, a continuation school.
Administration
Hamilton High is divided into six "small learning communities," or SLCs," which coordinate their own curricula and staff. They are:
- Academy of Music
- Humanities Magnet
- CAA (Communication Arts Academy)
- Global Studies
- BIT (Business & Interactive Technology)
- MSM (Math Science Medical)
During the 2008/2009 school year, the L & M (Leadership & Management) was eliminated and the students were placed in the four remaining non-magnet SLCs.
The Humanities Magnet and the Music Academy have their own buildings. Classes in those buildings are mostly held for that program, and offer teachers trained in those areas. The other SLC divisions hold classes in the larger main buildings.
Academy of Music
The Music Academy gained national attention in June 2002 when the Disney Channel premiered the reality TV show Totally in Tune, which chronicled members of the Academy's Symphony Orchestra as they struggled to cope with the demands of being a student, a musician, and a teenager in and out of the concert hall.
What makes the Academy of Music unique from other high schools is that it offers a large array of classes and programs in music and other performing arts. Hamilton Academy of Music students take traditional high school classes, but are also enrolled in classes in the Academy's elective departments. The Dance Department has two shows a year where the dancers get to showcase all they have learned. The Choir Department has a winter and spring voice concert and a benefit concert in the spring to raise money for competitions and choir trips. The Drama Department has two major productions in each semester and goes to other schools to perform as well have scene nights open to the public.
The Music Academy is a Grammy-recognized school. Hamilton Music Academy has won countless national and local awards. Many of its graduates have gone into the entertainment industry and are very successful. Even the staff have done productions in the entertainment industry.
The Choir department offers 5 courses with three training choirs and two performance choirs: Men's ensemble, Women's C and B choirs, and the performance choirs: Women's A & Vocal Jazz Choirs
The Dance department offers: Beginning Jazz, Intermediate 1,2,3, Advanced production, and a dance team.
The Drama department offers: Beginning, Intermidiate, Advanced, Theater Workshop & Play Production
The school is also equipped with a music studio in the Electronic Music Department.
Humanities Magnet
The Humanities Magnet, an intellectual hub of the campus, and statistically among the highest-scoring independent academic programs in all of L.A.U.S.D., was established in 1981. It offers an interdisciplinary liberal arts curriculum notable for its inclusion of Art History, Psychology, Philosophy, Ancient Civilization, and Grammar. As a university preparatory program, most classes in the Humanities Magnet are Honors or Advanced Placement level. The faculty of the Humanities Magnet includes two PhDs--Dr. Daniel Victor, English, and Dr. Robert Coad, Art History—and a stable of unconventional veteran teachers like Alan Kaplan, Gregg Beytin, Cesar Campos, Liz Colker and Barry Smolin.
Annually, an average of 98% of the magnet's graduates are admitted to colleges and universities. Of that group, more than 80% are accepted to four- year colleges or universities.[citation needed]
Athletics
Many of the sports teams in Hamilton High school are known for being great competitors. They have over 100 trophies won from various of sport competitions. The Hamilton Yankees have made it very far over the past few years; To either city or state finals. The school currently has the following sports; Cross Country, Soccer, Basketball, Football, Volleyball, Track, Softball, Swim, Tennis, and even Baseball. All of which contain amazing players, some of which have received even scholarships to USC, UCBerkely, etc.
Co-curricular activities
Hamilton's school newspaper is called The Federalist, a reference to The Federalist Papers, the writings of the Revolutionary patriot Alexander Hamilton, after whom the school was named. The school colors are green and white.
Demographics
As of 2006-2007 [1]:
- American Indians/Alaska Natives 0.4%
- Asian 3.9%
- Filipino 1.1%
- Pacific Islander 0.5%
- Black 43.6%
- Hispanic/Latino 44.4%
- White 11.0%
Feeder schools
Palms Middle School and Webster Middle School feed into Hamilton.
Notable alumni
- Stephen Baker, Wide Receiver for the 1989 Super Bowl Champions New York Giants
- Laila Ali, women's boxing champion[5]
- Danny Taddei, keyboardist, guitarist and singer-songwriter. The Official Web Site of Danny Taddei, Music Publishing
- Tom Hopkins, Guitar Player
- John Nelson, Guitar Player Suicidal Tendencies
- Jeff Long, Bass Player Wasted Youth (American band)
- Shade Sheist, #1 Billboard-charting recording artist, singer-songwriter, actor
- Fiona Apple,[citation needed] singer-songwriter
- Jordan Hill, singer
- Carmit Bachar,[citation needed] dancer-singer in the Pussycat Dolls
- Assemblywoman Karen Bass, majority leader and speaker-elect of the California State Assembly; representative of the 47th Assembly District [2]
- Genaro Bautista, Jr, LAPD Purple medal recipient 2007, actor, music composer
- Representative Howard Berman, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee; representative of California's 28th Congressional District [3] [4]
- Sarah Brown,[citation needed] actress
- Lizzy Caplan, actress
- David Cassidy,[citation needed] pop star, actor
- Julian Coryell, guitarist, singer-songwriter, producer
- Mike Elizondo, bassist and producer[6]
- William Ginsburg, attorney who represented Monica Lewinsky during investigations into her relationship with President Clinton
- Rowby Goren,[citation needed] Emmy-winning comedy writer and Internet Performer
- Charles Woods Gray, actor/director
- Emile Davenport Hirsch, actor[7]
- J. Hoberman, film critic
- Kelvin Martinez, actor, entertainer
- Adam Kirsch, author, journalist, critic
- Paul Koretz, City of Los Angeles Councilmember representing the 5th District, and former Assemblyman (California's 42nd Assembly District)
- Shia LaBeouf, actor
- Abe Laboriel, Jr., drummer[6]
- Michele Lee, Tony and Emmy-nominated singer/actress
- Alex D. Linz, actor
- Darris Love, actor
- Rod Martin, ex-NFL player, linebacker for the Los Angeles Raiders
- Al Michaels (1962), sportscaster
- Warren Moon, NFL Hall of Fame quarterback
- Walter Mosley, author
- Billy Mumy, actor
- Ed Niles, running back, architect
- Marc Norman, Academy Award-winning screenwriter
- MURS, rapper
- Scarub, rapper
- Eligh, rapper
- Omarion, R&B singer
- Ozomatli members Justin 'El Niño' Porée, Wil-Dog Abers and Asdru Sierra
- Norman J. Pattiz, founder Westwood One, nation's largest radio network
- Paula Patton, actress[8]
- Michelle Phillips, actress, singer
- Kyla Pratt, actress
- Nikki Reed, actress
- Ben Rich, former director of the Lockheed Skunk Works; father of "stealth technology"
- Robert Ri'chard, actor
- Joni Robbins née Joan Eva Rothman, voice-over actress The Official Web Site of Joni Robbins
- Darren Robinson, guitarist for the pop-rock band Phantom Planet
- Steven Robman (1962), television and theatre director/producer
- Daniel Rossen, guitarist/singer for Grizzly Bear and Department of Eagles
- Will Rothhaar, actor, Listen Up!
- Lynn Schenk (1962), lawyer, politician, U.S. Representative
- Robert Shapiro (1961?), one of the defense lawyers in the O.J. Simpson murder case
- Joel Siegel 1961?), critic on ABC television, author
- Donald K. Steinberg – senior American diplomat
- Leigh Steinberg, sports agent
- Stew, composer, Tony Award winning dramatist (Passing Strange)
- Houston Summers, R&B singer [9]
- Gwen Verdon, Broadway actress
- Sidney Wicks, 1971 NBA Rookie of the Year[10]
- John Wilbur, All-American football player at Stanford University, professional football player
- Tommy "Tiny" Lister, Actor,"Deebo", Friday with Ice cube
Filming location
The school has been used for several movies, television shows, and music videos.
TV Shows
- Mr. Novak (all episodes)
- Beverly Hills, 90210 (several episodes)
- CHiPs (couple of episodes)
- Highway To Heaven (couple of episodes)
- Once and Again (several episodes)
- Parker Lewis Can't Lose (several episodes)
- Sister, Sister (several episodes)
- Stu Erwin Show (facade at beginning of each show)
- That's So Raven (several episodes)
- Room 222
- Soap (facade at the beginning of each schoolroom scene)
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer (several episodes)
Movies
Music Videos
- "I'm Not Okay I Promise" - My Chemical Romance
- "Just the Girl" - The Click 5
- "Stole" - Kelly Rowland
- "Cinderella" - Lil' Romeo
- "Head of My Class" - Scooter ft Chris Brown
- "You're A Jerk" - New Boyz
- "New Perspective" - Panic! At The Disco
- "Im So Cocky" - Alley Kats
- "Tag Em In" - The Ranger$
BIG STAR FOR FOLLOWING YEARS:
-
- next year DD will attend THIS SCHOOL (she is signed with cashmoneyrecords)age 15 her music video will be filmed on our property of Alexander Hamilton High School over the summer of 2010.
References
- ^ LAUSD School Profile
- ^ The Citizen, June 12, 1931, p. 10, and November 20, 1931, p. 1
- ^ "Culver City History :: Schools". City of Culver City. http://www.culvercity.org/info/schools.asp?sec=vis. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
- ^ The Citizen, January 29, 1932, p. 11.
- ^ mark huberman, notable baseball and football protege anthony torres, got the short end of the height stick but still a great benchwarmer levine funes, our not so good short stop but he manages to get an ocassional infeild hit if that Mcquaid, Peter (December 17, 2000). "BOXER REBELLION". Los Angeles Times Magazine. http://8.12.42.31/2000/dec/17/magazine/tm-6538. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
- ^ a b "Chronic Groove - Mike Elizondo Brings Diversity & Soul To Dr. Dre’s Hip-Hop World". Bass Player Magazine. San Bruno, California. http://www.bassplayer.com/article/chronic-groove/Jan-05/494. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
- ^ "Emile Hirsch Biography". Yahoo! Movies. AEC One Stop Group, Inc.. http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1804492088/bio. Retrieved 2009-04-22. "Education * Paul Revere Middle School, Brentwood, CA * Hamilton High School, Los Angeles, CA"
- ^ "Paula Patton Is Pregnant Actress", celebrity.rightpundits.com, March 9, 2008
- ^ "ALL OF HOUSTON'S ARTICLES!". Houston Message Board. Powered by Invision Power Board. http://houston.forumsunlimited.com/lofiversion/index.php/t1216.html. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
- ^ Crowe, Jerry. "In time of great change, Sidney Wicks helped UCLA stay the same", Los Angeles Times, March 2, 2009
External links
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