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Lanier_High_School_(San_Antonio,_Texas) Latitude and Longitude:

29°25′18″N 98°30′59″W / 29.421801°N 98.516491°W / 29.421801; -98.516491
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sidney Lanier High School
Address
1514 West Cesar E. Chavez Boulevard

, ,
Coordinates 29°25′18″N 98°30′59″W / 29.421801°N 98.516491°W / 29.421801; -98.516491
Information
Established1915
School district San Antonio Independent School District
PrincipalMoises Ortiz, PhD
Faculty111
Grades 9th through 12th
Enrollment1,547 (2022-2023 [1])
Color(s)Blue and White and Grey
     
Mascot"Vok" (Mechanical gear)
YearbookLos Recuerdos
Website Official website

Sidney Lanier High School is a local public high school of the San Antonio Independent School District in the westside of San Antonio, Texas ( United States). Serving the San Antonio Independent School District, Lanier has an enrollment of 1,547 students. For the 2021-2022 school year, the school was given a "C" by the Texas Education Agency.

History

Sidney Lanier High School serves 9th through 12th grade students and opened in 1915 as McKinley Elementary School. In 1923, McKinley was renamed after Confederate poet Sidney Lanier in accordance with the District's practice of naming the junior schools after American authors. Lanier was a junior-senior high school from 1929 until 1969, when Tafolla Middle School opened. The new Lanier Campus, on the site of the old school, opened in 1975.

From 1967 to 1969, a group of students challenged and changed the curricular structure because of vocational tracking and insufficient academic college preparation. Student leaders, including Homer Garcia, Edgar Lozano, Stephen Castro, and Irene Ramirez, challenged the authority of the school and staged a walkout that catapulted Sidney Lanier into the limelight and forced the district to adapt to changes. Other students involved indirectly were members of the Mexican American Youth Organization (MAYO) started by Mario Compean, Jose Angel Gutierrez, and Ignacio Garcia, all students at St. Mary's University. Student leaders from Edgewood High School and even former Central Catholic High School students contributed ideas and participatory support. School administrators appointed Pablo Ortiz as Student Council President after Homer Garcia was deemed too disruptive and radical. Later, school administrators bowed to student and community pressure, conceding to demands. Even though a massive walkout was averted, some students did stage their protest march and left campus during lunch. Ultimately, the legacy benefited students so that more scholarships were awarded. The 1969 graduate, Homer Garcia, forged alliances with other campus leaders and graduated from the University of Texas and received a Ph.D. in sociology from Yale University. Other alumni from that year went on to author books and became professors and writers (Rafael Castillo, Ignacio Garcia, David O. Martinez and Daniel Hernandez). Rafael C. Castillo's (2023) "Dostoevsky on Guadalupe Street: Writings from the Edge" highlights some of those events and insight into the culture of social protest activity from a literary perspective.

In 1970, Lanier became one of the first schools in the U.S. to offer mariachi classes due to the efforts of education advocate Belle Ortiz. Classes spread to other districts and schools, remaining in the curriculum well into the 2020s.[ citation needed]

Traditions

Their mascot is a Vok, a gear emblem which symbolizes a smaller part of a big machine. Ultimately, the Vok represents an essential gear that would not function without support from its integral whole therefore analogous to a vocational student entering society and the workforce. Sidney Lanier was one of the first vocational schools in the westside of San Antonio. The school's most popular event, "The Chili Bowl," an annual football game played yearly against its rival Fox Tech High School since 1932, was popular until Fox Tech closed. Although the term "Chili Bowl" has an underlying negative connotation with a racist tint, the alumni adopted it nonetheless and reversed its negative effects by owning it. The district, however, announced in November 2009 that it would discontinue sports at Fox Tech as part of its plan to convert Fox Tech into a magnet school (football to be discontinued after the 2009-2010 year, and the remaining sports after two more years), thus ending the event after 2009. The Lanier Voks ended up winning the last game over the Buffaloes, 30–14. Afterward, both of the teams gathered in the center of Alamo Stadium, the place where this historic event was held, and took time to reflect on what this tradition meant to them, and how it felt to take part in this game. They joined in a chant, "Brothers!" and left after few photo-ops [2]

Athletics

The Lanier Voks compete in the following sports: [3]

References

  • Castillo, Rafael. Books opened minds and inspired change. San Antonio Express-News. December 4, 2017.
  • Castillo, Rafael. "Dostoevsky on Guadalupe Street: Writings from the Edge. Peter Lang International Publishers (Oxford), March 2023. https://www.peterlang.com/document/1288887
  • Recalling the walkouts of 1968. http://www.expressnews.com/150years/education-health/article/in1968-students-here-defied-prejudice-and6446428.php?
  • United States Commission on Civil Rights. Hearing Before the United States Commission On Civil Rights.: Hearing Held In San Antonio, Texas, December 9–14, 1968. Washington:U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1969.
  • Garcia, Ignacio. United We Stand: The rise and fall of La Raza Unida Party. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1989.
  • Hernandez, Daniel. The Milagro Affair. Archway Publications, 2017.
  • Castillo, Rafael. Aurora. Berkeley Press, 2010.
  • Castillo, Rafael. Distant Journeys. Bilingual Review: Arizona State University, 1990.
  • Lanier, Sidney. ""San Antonio de Bear"". (reprinted by Mary Ann Guerra). American Litho, 1980.
  • Martinez, David.O. "A Maze of Short Stories." Independently Published. January 2020.

External links