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In The Beginning... Amarillo High School first opened in 1889 in a two room structure that had also served as the first Potter County Court House. The building received several new additions (including a salon) to accommodate the rapidly growing Amarillo area. The over crowded school house was abandoned in 1889 when the Amarillo settlers built a new “city hall” at 1200 South Polk Street and rented it to the School Board for the price of $1.00. The building became know as “Red Brick” and included accommodations such as horse and donkey stalls. |
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The Fire... In 1970, on an early Sunday morning in March, a fire raged through the building. It first began in a second story storeroom, caused by a overheated boiler below, and soon spread to damage nearly all of the structure and destroy most of the property inside. Several courageous, yet foolish students arrived on the scene first and began removing textbooks, trophies, class gifts, art pieces and other artifacts from the burning building. Fortunately, no one was injured in the fire. The damage was estimated at the time to be nearly 2 million dollars. |
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The New Campus... After the fire in 1970, the Amarillo School Board voted to rebuild the school-- not on Polk Street, the site of the current school building, but at another larger campus on the city’s growing southwest side. The decision was a controversial one and protests against the move were soon heard in the streets and courthouses of Amarillo. |
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Works Cited... Amy Boardman. "Echoes in the halls: Amarillo High campuses." Amarillo Globe News 22 Oct. 1989: F2. Jason Akst. "Fire shatters Amarillo High on a quiet Sunday morning." Amarillo Globe News 22 Oct. 1989: F2. Bill Teeter. "AHS mascot was born on windblown ball field." Amarillo Globe News 22 Oct. 1989: F2. |