Pampanga High School

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Pampanga High School
Location
,
Philippines
Coordinates15°01′53″N 120°41′16″E / 15.0314°N 120.6877°E / 15.0314; 120.6877Coordinates: 15°01′53″N 120°41′16″E / 15.0314°N 120.6877°E / 15.0314; 120.6877
Information
Former nameJose Abad Santos High School
TypeNational High School (Public)
Established1902
PrincipalFe Rosalinda R. Caylao
Staff60
Faculty480
Grades7 to 12
Enrolment12,024 students (S.Y. 2019-2020)
 • Grade 72,266
 • Grade 82,472
 • Grade 92,401
 • Grade 102,315
 • Grade 111,452
 • Grade 121,118
CampusHigh School Blvd.,Barangay Lourdes, Area: 5.45 ha (13.5 acres)
Color(s)Yellow, Black
NicknamePHSians
NewspaperPampangan, Sinukuan
AffiliationDepartment of Education
Websitepampangahigh.school

Pampanga National High School (also known as Pampanga High School, or PHS) is a high school in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines.

It was formerly known as Jose Abad Santos High School or JASHS. The current main building of 'Pampanga High School was completed in 1935. It follows Standard Plan No. 20 of Gabaldon schoolhouses and is currently being restored as part of the Heritage Schoolhouse Restoration Program of the Department of Education. Among its graduates is former President Diosdado P. Macapagal.[1]

Old building[]

The Old Pampanga High School Building was the original site of the Pampanga High School. Completed shortly after 1910, it served as the main building of the Pampanga High School until 1935 when it was transferred to its present site. The building was then used as an annex of the school. It also served as the site of the University of the Philippines Extension Program in San Fernando, Pampanga, until floods hit San Fernando in 1995.

The beginnings of the Pampanga High School could be traced to the Eusebio Residence, located near the town plaza of San Fernando, where classes first began in 1908. Due to the lack of students, it was unable to form a senior class until 1911. Its first principal was Mr. John W. Osborn. The school was later moved to this building near the Provincial Capitol to accommodate more students.

The school population grew to 4000 plus students in the mid-1960s as youths from nearby towns started to enroll. Pablo Pinlac, the principal, started sports programs like track and field, basketball, volleyball, soccer, baseball, etc. Thanks to coaches like Rafael Aguilar the school competed against other Central Luzon schools.

Starting around this time, the school newspaper, The Pampangan, was getting recognition nationally. Under Miss Gervacia Guarin's leadership, the school won several medals against schools from the big cities.

In 1960, Pampanga High School had one of its more successful years when several writers won a gold medal (P. Lacson in Sportswriting), and two bronze medals, and some top six winners.

A lot of the graduates migrated to the US and became very successful doctors, nurses, accountants, etc. And those who stayed are just as prominent.

In 2010, the Pampanga High School Student government installs ID Scanners to monitor the attendance of all the students and faculties of Pampanga High School. It is one of the Public Schools that use this kind of system.

The early foundations of what we know today as Pampanga High School were initially laid out in July 1901 when first American civil governor Howard H. Taft succeeded Major General Arthur MacArthur as American Chief Executive in the Philippines. Governor Taft, who became the 27th president of the United States of America in 1909–1913, fully established a civilian government in the Philippines to replace the military rule of his predecessors.

One of the four executive departments of the central government, the Department of Public Instruction under the administration of Honorable Bernard Moses, a member of the Second Philippine Commission initiated public education in Pampanga and in other provinces of the Philippines. Twenty-five civilian educators from the six hundred American teachers known as Thomasites who arrived from the United States aboard the U.S.A.T. Thomas on August 23, 1901, were assigned in nineteen towns of Pampanga. The initial objectives of the American educators with the cooperation of municipal and provincial officials were to establish at least one primary school (Grades I to IV) in each municipality and the recruitment of native Pampangan teachers for training in the English language and in new teaching methods. A "teachers institute" was created in San Fernando to meet the need for native Pampangan teachers.

It was quite a struggle in putting up a new educational system right after the Philippine–American War. New buildings had to be constructed; supplies, books, and other instructional materials had to be procured. Pampangan native teachers had to learn the English language and had to be trained in new methods of teaching. The cooperation of parents and local government officials had to be solicited also.

By 1905, about a year after the provincial capital was transferred from Bacolor to San Fernando, Governor Macario Arnedo was able to secure additional funds from the national government to open five intermediate schools (Grade V to VII) along with the provincial school and two trade schools, one in Apalit and one in Bacolor.

By the end of the first decade of the 20th century, the intermediate schools increased to eight, and the provincial normal school was converted into a regular high school. The trade school in Apalit ceased operations in later years while the trade school in Bacolor grew into industrial art and technical college, which was renamed later as Don Honorio Ventura College of Arts and Trades in honor of Governor and Secretary of the Interior HonorioVentura.

The effort and sacrifices of the pioneering educators in Pampanga resulted in positive progress. As evidence of the quality of public education in Pampanga particularly in the secondary level, eleven (11) of the more than two hundred (200) participants to the "Pensionado Program" set up by the Philippine Commission from 1903 to 1910 were originally from Pampanga. Many of these government scholars with at least secondary education diplomas who were sponsored to study in American colleges and universities became great leaders in government service, law, education, medicine, and politics. The most famous of these government scholars was Secretary of Justice and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Jose Abad Santos who is acclaimed today as a national hero.

In the 1918-1919 commencement exercises of the University of the Philippines, Pampangans were awarded the second-highest total of degrees. Only graduates from the Manila area exceeded the total of Pampangan UP graduates in that particular school year. Such commendable accomplishments validated the intellectual excellence of many Pampangan students and the outstanding college preparation they received from their secondary school teachers.

The Golden Jubilee Celebration Souvenir Program of Pampanga High School in 1962 indicated that in 1908 the Pampanga High School classrooms were located in a big house in downtown San Fernando known then as the " Bison Building ". When the student population increased tremendously, the Pampanga High School moved to a bigger concrete building along the old highway near the Provincial Capitol in barrio Santo Nino. The high school building in downtown San Fernando later became a popular lodging and dining facility known as Pampanga Hotel and Restaurant.

The school principal during the early years of Pampanga High School was an American educator by the name of John W. Osborn. Nineteen (19) students graduated in 1912 with Wenceslao Vitug as valedictorian and Macaria Roque as salutatorian. The school was under the supervision of American educators until 1935 when the last American principal, Charles G. Whitewell was succeeded by Demetrio Andres who served as school principal until 1939.

In 1937, during the administration of provincial Governor Pablo Angeles David when the Philippines was still a commonwealth and Manuel L. Quezon was the president, classes were transferred again to new and bigger facilities along Teopaco Street now known as High School Boulevard in San Fernando, Pampanga. The concrete high school building near the provincial capital was converted to a military hospital after World War II. It became later the San Fernando Branch of the University of the Philippines until it was significantly damaged by lahar in 1991.

Classes at Pampanga High School were interrupted from 1942 to 1944 due to World War II. When regular classes were resumed after the war, Alvaro Punla and Wilfredo Castro graduated valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively, in 1945.

In an exchange of emails with Dr. Antonio R. Suba of PHS Class 1942, he wrote that the members of his class received their diplomas in 1946 in a special graduation ceremony. Class members who perished during World War II were honored and their respective families received their diplomas.

Repairs and renovations of aging facilities and structural damage brought by the 1991 volcanic eruption of Mt. Pinatubo and other calamities are being initiated as funds become available through government appropriations and donations from generous alumni. The federation of school alumni associations under the presidency of Mr. Angelo D. David of Class 1947 is currently raising funds and coordinating the implementation of the Total Master Site Development Plan of the Pampanga High School to meet the needs of a growing student population.

On October 22, 2005, the groundbreaking ceremony of a new three-story building to be built at the school campus was attended by prominent alumni, school administrators, faculty members, and government officials.[2]

Noted alumni[]

Image gallery[]

References[]

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