Waialua High and Intermediate School

Waialua High and Intermediate School
Address
67-160 Farrington Highway
Waialua, Hawaii, 96791
United States
Information
Type Public, Co-educational
Established 1936
School district Central District
Principal Ms. Avis Nambu
Faculty 40 (approx.)
Grades 7-12
Number of students 619 (approx.)
Campus Rural
Color(s) Scarlet and Grey          
Athletics Oahu Interscholastic Association
Mascot Bulldogs
Newspaper The Waialuan
Yearbook Ho'omanao
Military United States Army JROTC
Website http://www.k12.hi.us/~waialuah/

Waialua High and Intermediate School is a public intermediate and high school for grades 7-12 in the Waialua CDP in City and County of Honolulu,[1] Hawaii on the Island of Oahu.

The campus boasts the painted plastic mural A Waialua Day by Balazs Szabo and the mixed media sculpture Waialua from Ken Shutt’s Konohiki Series.

History

The school was founded in 1914 as a single-roomed school called Mokuleia School. In 1927 Andrew E. Cox donated 15-acre (61,000 m2) tracts of land for the school's campus, and it was renamed Andrew E. Cox Junior High School. In 1937 the school was enlarged to include a senior high school and was renamed to its present name.

References

  1. "Waialua CDP, Hawaii." U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved on May 21, 2009.

External links

Coordinates: 21°33′56″N 158°07′32″W / 21.565671°N 158.125615°W / 21.565671; -158.125615

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