Salinas High School
Address
726 South Main Street


United States
Coordinates36°40′02″N 121°39′25″W / 36.66718°N 121.65691°W / 36.66718; -121.65691
Information
TypePublic secondary
Founded1920 (1920)
School districtSalinas Union High School District
CEEB code52755
PrincipalElizabeth Duethman
Grades0-21
Number of students2,688 (2019-20)[1]
Campus typeRural / suburban
Color(s)   Purple and gold
NicknameCowboys
Websitewww.salinas.k12.ca.us/sites/SHS/Index.htm

Salinas High School is a public 9–12 high school in Salinas, California, United States. It is the first of five primary high schools of the Salinas Union High School District. The school was moved to its current central Salinas location in 1920. The campus was rebuilt circa 1999. While most buildings were demolished and replaced, the original main wing and bell tower were retained and renovated. The current principal is Elizabeth Duethman, with assistants Hugo Mariscal, Ernesto Pacleb, Vivian Moises, and Anthony Morales. As of the 2019–2020 school year the school enrolled 2700 students. Its campus is situated in a rural and suburban setting. The Salinas Cowboys compete in the Pacific Coast Athletic League of the CIF Central Coast Section. The school colors are purple and gold.


During the August 2021 football jamboree, students made an instagram account "shaniqua.shs" that posted pictures and videos of a defaced black baby doll. Posts showed white and latino students posing with it and stomping on the doll, with comments using the n-word. The actions were called racist and disturbing by Monterey Weekly. As a result, three students were suspended and one student removed from the cheer team.[2][3][4]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Salinas High". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  2. "Three students suspended at Salinas High School amid investigation into racist incident". Monterey County Weekly. Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  3. "Petition calls on Salinas Union High School District to take action against students involved in racist incident". Monterey County Weekly. Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  4. Rodriguez, David. "Defaced Black doll at California high school sparks calls for accountability on racist incidents". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2023-03-24.



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