Type Public high school Established 1865 Principal Ron Okamura Area 3 ha Founded 1865 | Motto Ike Makaukau Aloha Grades 9-12 Phone +1 808-594-0400 | |
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Address 1039 S King St, Honolulu, HI 96814, USA District Hawai'i Department of Education Similar Kaimuki High School, President Theodore Roosevel, Moanalua High School, Governor Wallace Rider Far, Iolani School Profiles |
President william mckinley high school winter concert 2012
President William McKinley High School, more commonly referred to as McKinley High School, is a comprehensive public high school in the Honolulu District of the Hawaii State Department of Education. It serves grades nine through twelve. McKinley is one of three schools in the Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt Complex Area which includes Kaimuki High School and Roosevelt High School. It was founded as Fort Street English Day School in 1865. It was renamed in memorial to William McKinley, the twenty-fifth President of the United States, in 1907. President William McKinley High School is one of the oldest secondary schools in the state and several of its buildings have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The campus displays sculptures by Satoru Abe (1926–) and Bumpei Akaji (1921–2002). McKinley High School is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges through 2013.
Contents
- President william mckinley high school winter concert 2012
- 2016 mckinley high school tigers homecoming 10 1 16 click2ed videos
- History
- Student demographics
- Faculty
- Complex area information
- McKinley Complex
- Feeder Middle Schools
- Athletics
- Football
- McKinley Athletic Complex
- Noted alumni
- Architecture gallery
- References
2016 mckinley high school tigers homecoming 10 1 16 click2ed videos
History
Timeline of notable McKinley High School events
Student demographics
School Year 2010-2011
Racial composition:
Faculty
School Year 2001-2002
School Year 2010-2011
Complex area information
McKinley High School is part of the Hawaii Department of Education Kaimuki-McKinley-Roosevelt Complex Area along with Kaimuki High School and Roosevelt High School.
McKinley Complex
The McKinley Complex consists of 11 elementary, middle, and public charter schools including McKinley.
Feeder Middle Schools
McKinley High School feeds primarily from 4 middle schools in the Honolulu area.
Athletics
In 2011, McKinley fielded 56 teams competing in 19 sports. These sports including air riflery, baseball, basketball, bowling, canoe paddling, cheerleading, cross country, football, golf, judo, soccer, softball, soft tennis, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo. and wrestling. McKinley competes in the Oahu Interscholastic Association.
McKinley has fielded girls teams in basketball, volleyball, and swimming as early as in the 1910s. Some years even fielded girls baseball team before softball became recognized as its own sport. The yearbooks of those early years noted games often against St. Andrew's Priory, YWCA, Palama, Normal School (later merged with University of Hawaii's College of Education), and even College of Hawaii (now known as University of Hawaii). McKinley was a founding member of the Interscholastic League of Honolulu in 1909 alongside Punahou and Kamehameha. In 1970, McKinley left the ILH with 4 other Honolulu area public schools to join the OIA.
The 1933 football team traveled across the Pacific Ocean and went on to defeat Weber College (now known as Weber State University), BYU freshmen team, and Ricks College (now known as BYU-Idaho). Ricks College traveled to Honolulu the following year. McKinley won again by the score of 24-6 in a game attended by about 19,000 fans.
Football
The McKinley Tigers varsity football team competes in the Oahu Interscholastic Association Red-East division. Joseph Cho has served as the team's head coach since 2010.
For the 2010 and 2011 seasons, McKinley's Tiger football team competed in the Oahu Interscholastic Association White Division (Division II) along with 7 other Oahu public schools including rival Kaimuki High School. In 2012, the football team was promoted to the OIA Red-East Division (Division I) where it currently competes with 6 other Oahu public schools. The Tigers' homefield is currently the 3000 seat Ticky Vasconcellos Stadium on the Roosevelt High School campus.
In September 2012, the McKinley football team traveled to Corvallis, Oregon to play the OSAA 4A champions La Salle High School Falcons on the campus of Crescent Valley High School. McKinley won 43-22.
Season records
McKinley Athletic Complex
In September 2008, it was announced that McKinley was planning to upgrade its aging athletic facilities. Expected to cost more than $121 million, the upgrade has 14 elements including a 1,200 stall parking lot, construction of a second gym, renovation of the current gym, construction of a girls softball stadium, construction of a baseball stadium, construction of a 50-meter swimming pool, and construction of a 10,000 seat football stadium.
In 2011, ground was broken on the softball stadium. When completed, the softball stadium will be designated as the OIA softball championship field.
Noted alumni
Listed alphabetically by last name (year of graduation or years of birth and death)
Architecture gallery
The architect most involved in the early layout of the King Street campus and design of its Spanish Colonial Revival buildings was Louis E. Davis. The original quadrangle was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.