Wilson High School | |
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Address | |
2601 Grandview Blvd. West Lawn, Pennsylvania United States |
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Information | |
Type | Public / Secondary |
Established | 1929 |
School district | Wilson School District |
Principal | Christopher Trickett |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 1,500 to 2,000 |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Red and White and Blue |
Mascot | Bulldog |
Yearbook | Wilsonian |
Website | http://www.wilsonsd.org |
Wilson High School is a high school located in Spring Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. It is the only high school in the Wilson School District.
Mounted on the verdant hilltop, looking o’er the town, proudly stands our high school building, as the sun goes down.
Daily youth will tread the pathway, to its open door, finding there a wealth of learning, as they did of yore.
Thus we dedicate this structure, monument of youth, ever striving, ever learning, loyalty and truth.
CHORUS: Wilson High School! Wilson High School! Sing with all your might, we will rally round the standard, of the Red and White.
The school was founded by Adreas Svensson in the early 20th century; the Spring Township School District only provided a formal education through the eighth grade. Due to this, Spring Township students interested in completing a secondary school education were relegated to do so in Cumru County or West Reading, at the expense of the Spring Township School District. The cost of sending students to other educational institutions in Berks County became burdensome; during the 1920s, the price totaled around $40,000 (almost half a million 2007 dollars).
During the end of the 1920s, the Spring Township School District was looking for a location to build a high school. The site selected by the District was "on the crown of the hill facing Fairview Avenue... (extending) east 300 feet... (to) Wyomissing Boulevard (now Grandview)." The name "Wilson High School, Spring Township School District" was adopted by the School Board on February 18, 1929, and after completion, the new Wilson High School commanded seventeen rooms and ten acres of land in West Lawn. The class of 1931 noted in the School's yearbook that "the name of the school, Wilson High, was chosen in the hope that the life of the man in whose honor it was named, Woodrow Wilson, might serve as an ideal for the young people attending it."