The Longview Independent School
District was created by a special act of the 31st Texas Legislature in March
1909.
On September 2, 1927, the Longview
Independent School District purchased more property in the vicinity of Green and College
Streets. This property was for the erection of a brick building to house Longview High
School, replacing the frame structure built in 1885.
In 1930, when oil was discovered in
East Texas, school enrollment increased from 1,970 to 4,400 in a two-year period. No oil
had been discovered with the Longview Independent School District, and a financial crisis
was intensified.
Located on 6.3 acres on the corner
of College and Green streets, the new high school was constructed of multicolored brick,
wood frame windows, and a red clay-tile roof. It was used for years as a high school, then
converted to a junior high school when a new high school was built on East Whaley Street
in 1932.
The Green Street school was, for
many years, a center of community activity, having been used as a polling place and a
temporary place of worship for various churches. The auditorium was used for civic music
concerts, "Lion's Jollies," band concerts, and civic productions in the 1930s
and 1940s.
- In 1932, a three-story concrete and brick high
school building for three grades was erected on Whaley Street. The urgency to relieve
overcrowded conditions at the South Green site necessitated round-the-clock construction
at times. The structure was designed by noted architect Mark Lemmon and built by R. F.
Ball. It featured art deco entrances with terra cotta and fluted pilasters. The classrooms
had hardwood floors. Redbud trees were planted near the street.
The annexation of the Rollins Common
School District in 1936 and the Elderville Common School district in 1961 further added to
the district's enrollment.
By 1976, following consolidation
with Judson High School and the integration of Womack High School, enrollment growth
dictated the move of the high school to the present location on Tomlinson Parkway. In
1988, after failed attempts by former students to preserve "old Longview High
School," the building was demolished.