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                  | George Washington High School, circa 1939 Photo: Surveyor, 1947
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                  | George Washington High School, 2009 Photo: Tammy Aramian
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 George Washington’s Proud Beginnings
 When George Washington High School was a rock quarry, 1861 –
              cable cars
              (or their forerunners) were pulled by horses, gold strikes were
              common
              occurrences, clipper ships sailed the Pacific; and San Franciscans
              of that
              day had the vision to provide for schools, and especially for one
              particular
              school located at what is now 32nd Avenue and Anza Street.
             Seventy-five years later, in 1936 financed partly by a bond
              issue, partly
              by the Federal Government, Washington High School was erected at a
              cost
              of approximately $2,000,000.
             THE BACKGROUND OF GEORGE WASHINGTON
             “The foresight of San Francisco pioneers is reflected in the
              total investment
              for a section of the George Washington High School site, as far
              back as
              1861, when 150 x 240 feet was set aside for school purposes under
              the provisions
              of the outside lands act. Out of this nucleus the remainder of the
              site
              was purchased by the Board of Education in 1925.”
             The above paragraph, an excerpt from a program of the Ground
              Breaking
              Exercises which took place November 4, 1934, at 31st Avenue and
              Anza Street,
              shows that our school was considered, planned for, back in the
              days when
              the Richmond district was sand dunes.
             GENERAL PLANS, ARCHITECTURE, SCULPTURE
             The general plans for Washington called for a main academic unit,
              shops,
              an auditorium, boys’ and girls’ gymnasiums, football field,
              outdoor tennis
              and basketball courts, a music conservatory, a baseball field, a
              running
              track and a swimming pool.
             Timothy L. Pflueger, architect of George Washington High School,
              died
              almost ten years to the day that Washington celebrated its tenth
              anniversary.
              Mr. Pflueger was world-famous in his field, having worked on the
              San Francisco-Oakland
              Bay Bridge, and many of the buildings of the Golden Gate
              International
              Exposition of 1939. Union Square Garage was designed by Mr.
              Pflueger in
              1942; Alamo and Jefferson grammar schools, and Roosevelt Junior
              High School
              were completed by him before 1930. His later projects were George
              Washington,
              then Lincoln High School, and the Science building and gymnasium
              at San
              Francisco Junior College.
             Source: Surveyor, 25th Anniversary, 1961 (extracted by
              Dennis
              Beedie)
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