Yates was named after Reverend John Henry "Jack" Yates, a former slave and a minister.[3] Jack Yates and other leading blacks established the Houston Baptist Academy. Within a decade, the success of the school prompted Reverend Yates to reorganize the Houston Baptist Academy as the Houston College, the school offered a special opportunity to the black children of the community who sought an alternative to the Colored High School of the public school system.
Yates has HISD's magnet program for communications: broadcast TV, radio, print, and photography. Yates also houses a maritime studies magnet program.[4]
In 2010, Paul Knight of the Houston Press wrote that "the school remains a symbol of solidarity in the Third Ward."[5]
In June 2016, members of the Jack Yates and HISD communities held a ground-breaking ceremony for the new campus. A $59.4 million campus was completed next to the old campus in summer 2018.[6]
Previously Houston had only one secondary school for black people, Colored High School. In 1925 the school board stated that it would build a new black high school due to the increasing black population. The Houston Informer stated that the schools need to be named after prominent black people from the city and/or other successful black persons. The new high school was to be named after Jack Yates, a prominent black Houstonian, and the original colored high school was renamed Booker T. Washington High School.[8]
The original Yates High was built from a $4 million (about $69495256.17 when accounting for inflation) bond program, which included $500,000 (about $8686907.02 when accounting for inflation) to renovate 17 existing schools and build new schools. Clifton Richardson, the editor of the Houston Informer, had felt skepticism towards this proposal but ultimately asked Houston's African-Americans to vote for the bond and endorsed it in the Informer. In 1925, HISD originally proposed to have the school built for $100,000 (about $17373814.04 when accounting for inflation), but Richardson opposed this plan, prompting the district to revise the bond.[9] The first principal, James D. Ryan, served from the opening until his death in 1941;[7] William S. Holland became Yates's second principal that year.[10]
In pre-desegregation times middle and upper class black families sent their children to Yates.[11]
By February 1951, Yates had 2,100 students. By that month Jack Yates had an addition that slightly increased student capacity and a remodeling, but the school was still overcrowded as the enlarged facility was designed for 1,600 students. By March 1954 the student body was over 3,000.[12] As a result of the overcrowding the Southern Association of Secondary Schools pulled Yates's accreditation.[13]
In 1955, as a new Allen Elementary School opened in a neighborhood far from its original location, the former Allen campus, in what is now Midtown, became the Yates Annex, a school for black 7th graders. In 1956, the annex was converted into J. Will Jones Elementary School.[14][15]
On January 27, 1958, Worthing High School opened, relieving Yates.[16] Yates moved to its Sampson Street location in September 1958. Yates's former site became Ryan Colored Junior High School (now Ryan Middle School), named after the first principal of Yates.[7] The HISD school board forced Holland to stay at Ryan Middle School instead of moving onto the new Yates, and a petition from the community did not succeed in changing this.[17]
Schools in HISD were named after former principals William S. Holland and James E. Codwell.[7]
Desegregation and post-desegregation
After the 1970 desegregation resulting from the Civil Rights Movement, HISD had established magnet programs and other alternative education programs.[5] Many upper and middle class blacks sent their children to Bellaire High School, Lamar High School, and other schools previously only for Whites;[11] until 1970 HISD counted its Hispanic and Latino students as "white."[12] In addition, many black people moved from the Third Ward to the suburbs.[5] Violence became more common and the facility was defaced with graffiti. William G. Ouchi, author of Making Schools Work: A Revolutionary Plan to Get Your Children the Education They Need, wrote that due to the loss of the middle and upper class students, Yates "fell on hard times."[11]
The Yates photography magnet school program began in fall 1978.[7]
In 1987, a survey at Yates showed that 108 female students were pregnant and 50% of them were having their second pregnancies. In 1989 Chester Smith, the principal, prohibited the school newspaper from publishing a story about a pregnant student.[18]
In the 1990s, superintendent Rod Paige recruited Robert Worthy, who was previously teaching in the Pasadena Independent School District, to revitalize the school. Worthy removed most of the administrators and 60 teachers, making up about half of the faculty, within a two-year period to remove any pre-existing negative cultural influences from Yates. Worthy also established additional Advanced Placement courses and removed a Cleaning and Pressing Program.[11]
From 1998 through 2002, the school reported that 99% of students graduating from Yates planned to attend colleges and universities. In response a parent and alumnus of Yates quoted in a 2003 The New York Times article, Larry Blackmon, stated that "Absolutely, positively, no way. You'd get more of an accurate count asking elementary kids if they plan to go to college."[22]
Around 2003, Yates' principal hired several uncertified teachers and substitute teachers, using them to replace experienced but more highly paid teachers who were fired by the principal. In addition around that time Yates had gone without a school library for over a year.[22]
In 2007, a Johns Hopkins University study commissioned by the Associated Press cited Yates as a "dropout factory" where at least 40% of the entering freshman class do not make it to their senior year.[24]
In 2008 Ouchi stated that Yates had improved during Worthy's term as principal, citing the "pride" present in the school, the students' compliance with the school uniform policy, and hallways that were "clean enough to eat on".[11]
Yates, along with Sam Houston High School and Kashmere High School, was low-performing in test scores from 2001 to 2004. Because of this problem, there were movements to have the state or another organization take over the schools for a period so the test scores would be at acceptable levels. Yates received an "acceptable" rating from the Texas Education Agency in 2005.[citation needed]
The 2005 enrollment was below 50% of the enrollment 20 years prior.[25] In a 2005 Houston Chronicle article Bill Miller, president of the Yates High School Parent-Teacher-Student Association, criticized the decrease in enrollment. Many students in the Yates High School attendance zone instead chose to attend other high schools. Miller proposed having HISD end its open enrollment policies.[26]
In an e-mail sent in 2010, HISD board member and former Yates student Paula Harris said that she was responsible for having a principal at Yates removed from the school and for having the new principal installed.[27]
In June 2015, Ericka Mellon of the Houston Chronicle wrote that members of the Third Ward community had "concerns about leadership turnover, weak academic performance and safety problems" and were "vocal with its frustrations at Yates".[28]
In May 2015, Donetrus Hill, then the principal of Yates, resigned and took a settlement agreement. Kenneth Davis, who previously served as the principal of Dowling Middle School (now Lawson Middle School) and as a supervisor of HISD middle school principals, became the principal of Yates at that time.[28]
In June 2018, Tiffany Guillory became the principal.[29] In December 2022 HISD administrators placed her on leave.[30] The district leadership did not publicly state why the leave had occurred.[31] Residents in the area stated opposition against a proposal to remove Guillory, and the HISD board of trustees decided to retain her as principal.[32]
In addition, Cambridge Oaks, a university housing complex, is zoned to Yates.[37] Cambridge Oaks houses University of Houston students who have dependent children and is the institution's designated family housing unit.[38]
Campus
The current Yates campus has the Crimson & Gold Café as its cafeteria, and it has eight science laboratories.[39] The campus is located between Texas Southern University and the University of Houston.
In 2012, Richard Connelly of the Houston Press ranked the previous 1958 Yates campus as the second most architecturally beautiful high school campus in Greater Houston. Connelly said that "Some would call this generic, but we like the proud `60s style."[40]
Demographics
In 2018, the school had approximately 900 students. About 90% African-American and 10% Hispanic,[41]
In 2010, the school had about 1,200 students. Most of them were African-American. Of the remainder, 88 were Hispanic, 7 were Asian, and 3 were White.[5]
In the 2015–2016 school year, Yates gained over 110 students who moved from other HISD schools, while 738 high school students previously attending Yates moved to other HISD schools.[42]
Yates had 3,600 students in the mid-1980s.[5] In 2001, by a margin of 700 votes, the student body voted for an Asian American as Mr. Yates, reflecting an increase in non-black students in majority black schools in the Houston area.[43]
School uniform
Students at Yates are required to wear a school uniform.[44] The Texas Education Agency specifies that the parents and/or guardians of students zoned to a school with uniforms may apply for a waiver to opt out of the uniform policy so their children do not have to wear the uniform; parents must specify "bona fide" reasons, such as religious reasons or philosophical objections.[45]
Yates has HISD's magnet program for communications: broadcast TV, radio, print, and photography. Yates also houses a maritime studies magnet program.
Prior to 2015, the school allowed students who missed too many classes to pass a course but otherwise had passing grades to do cleaning work to make up for the absences. HISD asked Yates to change its policy.[47]
Yates competes in several sports, but the most prominent and successful sport on campus is boys' basketball.[citation needed] In 1994 Andrew W. Miracle, the author of Lessons of the Locker Room: The Myth of School Sports, wrote that the athletics programs at Yates High School have the same kind of importance in the Third Ward as the athletics programs at rural Texas high schools do for their respective small town and rural communities.[48]
In February 2012, Yates was reclassified as a UIL 3A school, down from the 4A level.[50]
Basketball
In 2010, Paul Knight of the Houston Press reported that, "no high school basketball team in the state and perhaps the country has played better than Yates."[51] As of 2010, only two of the players on the basketball team were not from the Third Ward.[5]
In March 2010, Yates' boys basketball team was ranked number one in the nation by USA Today having defeated their opponents by margins of 135, 115, 99 (twice), 98, 90 and 88 points. On January 6, 2010, the basketball team defeated Class 4A District 21 opponent Lee High School (now Wisdom High School) 170–35, setting the state record for points in a game and sparking a debate in the process. Despite a 100-12 halftime lead, the Lions stayed true to their pressing and trapping style, which did not sit well with Lee head coach Jacques Armant.[citation needed]
Jacques Armant, the basketball coach at Lee High, criticized the mass scoring, saying that it could cause violence. ESPN writer Rick Reilly criticized Yates basketball Coach Greg Wise and stated "At the very least, USA Today ought to remove Yates from its national rankings—the school is No. 1—as a statement about basic sports decency."[52]
As of 2015, Jack Yates boys' basketball program has won four state titles since the 2009 season.[citation needed]
American football
In the segregation era schools for blacks played their games on weekdays while schools for whites played their games on Fridays.[12]
In 1939, Yates coach Andrew "Pat" Patterson asked principal William S. Holland to meet with E. B. Evans, the president of Prairie View A&M University, to discuss regulating American football played by black schools and establishing a football league for them. The Prairie View Leagues established a football league in 1940 and Yates was in this league until 1968.[53] Rick Sherrod, author of Texas High School Football Dynasties, described Patterson as the "architect" of the PVIL football league.[49]
Historically the American football game between Yates and Wheatley High School was among the most prominent ones in the United States.[12] Beginning in 1927,[54] each Thanksgiving Day the school's American football team played Yates High School's football team at the Jeppeson Stadium.[55] The Yates-Wheatley Thanksgiving football match, described by On American Soil: How Justice Became a Casualty of World War II author Jack Hamann as "the most important noncollege football game in the country", often had crowds that had over 30,000 people.[56] The rivalry declined after Yates joined the UIL, and after the football leagues integrated the Thanksgiving Day Yates-Wheatley game ended.[57]
Coach Patterson, while in the PVIL league, had a 73.2% win record, 200-64-9, and his team received four state titles from PVIL.[49]
Yates lost to Lake Highlands High School in the 1981 Texas state American football championship game. The principal of Yates stated that a "positive atmosphere" occurred in the Third Ward despite the loss since Yates had gotten to the championships.[48]
Jerald Moore – former NFL player (St. Louis Rams, Oakland Raiders, New Orleans Saints); All Big Eight University Of Oklahoma, Jack Yates all-time leading rusher in yards and touchdowns
Ouchi, William G. Making Schools Work: A Revolutionary Plan to Get Your Children the Education They Need. Simon & Schuster, June 24, 2008. ISBN1439108102, 9781439108109.
^ abcdefKnight, Paul. "Third Ward High." Houston Press. Wednesday April 7, 2010. p. 2Archived April 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on April 2, 2014. "All but two of the Yates players grew up in the Third Ward."
^"how to contact usArchived July 8, 2015, at the Wayback Machine." Cambridge Oaks. Retrieved on August 15, 2011. "Village address Cambridge Oaks 4444 Cullen Boulevard Houston, TX 77004"
^Connelly, Richard. "The 7 Best-Looking High Schools in Houston." Houston Press. Tuesday May 22, 2012. 2Archived June 6, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on May 27, 2012.
^Knight, Paul. "Third Ward High." Houston Press. Wednesday April 7, 2010. p. 1Archived April 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on April 2, 2014.
^"Gets Promotion". The Washington Post. September 11, 1962. p. A11; "Negro Will Head Job Equality Unit". The Washington Post. September 11, 1962. p. A20.
^"Negro Named Associate Counsel to Johnson". The Washington Post. April 5, 1964. p. A8; "3 Are Appointed to Johnson Staff". The New York Times. April 5, 1964. p. 83.
^Karnow, Stanley (August 26, 1965). "Four Added To Goldberg U.N. Staff: James Roosevelt, Others Tapped in Changing of Guard". The Washington Post. p. A1; "President Appoints Negro Export-Import Bank Aide". The New York Times. August 26, 1965. p. 12.
This list is incomplete. This template refers to the modern Third Ward and not the historical political definition. Exact definitions of the Third Ward differ depending on the agency/authority/person. Leeland/Third Ward is outside of the common boundaries of the Third Ward but is in close proximity. DeBakey HSHP was in the Third Ward area but moved away from it in summer 2017. Pro-Vision Academy was in the Third Ward from 1995 to 2008, moving to Sunnyside afterwards.
This list is incomplete. This list only includes schools in the Houston city limits. Multiple schools with "Houston, Texas" addresses are not in the city limits.