Kubasaki High School - History

History

The first classes started sometime in November 1946 at a site named “Okinawa University Study Center” in Camp Hayward with Dr. Theodora J. Koob as its founder and first principal. Classes were held within the site of Okinawa University Study Center in a large quonset hut under the name "Okinawa University School". The first classes consisted of 30 students and faculty; the initial schedule consisting of a half day, six days per week and was inclusive of only six grades. Middle and High School Grade Children were included sometime between November 1946 and March of 1947. The school Newspaper was called "The Quonsetter", there was no yearbook printed in 1947.

In the fall of 1947 classes opened the school year in a group of 15 Butler type prefabricated buildings in the Awase housing area with 177 Students and 11 Teachers Serving Grades 1 through 12. 1947-1948 was the first year that high school seniors attended Okinawa University School. An obvious problem with graduating seniors was the lack of accreditation of the school, however, on March 11, 1948 through the efforts of Dr. Theodora Koob, Okinawa University School received accreditation from The Northwest Association of Secondary and Higher Schools. The first School yearbook was printed in 1948 and was called the "Torii", The school newspaper was called the "Typhoon". In July 1949, Typhoon Gloria destroyed the school and delayed the opening of the school year. When school did begin, teachers and students were forced to conduct their classes in two temporary family residences in the "New Sukiran Housing Area" (Zukeran, now known as Camp Foster). In November of that year, the school name was changed to "Okinawa-American Dependent High School" and moved back to the Awase Housing Area into quonset huts. Later, communist aggression on the Korean Peninsula necessitated a ban on dependent travel in the Far East, resulting in few new students enrolled at the school until 1951. At Some point before 1952, the school name was changed to Okinawa-American Dependent School and in 1952 during the publication of the 5th Torii, the Dragon was chosen as the Mascot.

By 1952 rising enrollment forced a move to another set of quonsets at the Army Training School located at Camp Kubasaki. The high school age kids were moved to the new campus at Camp Kubasaki while the elementary and middle school kids remained at Awase. The name of the high school was changed in the fall of 1952 to Okinawa-American Dependents High School.Sometime between the Fall of 1952 and the fall of 1955 The School Name was changed again to Kubasaki American High School

In 1958, the school was moved once again into partitioned barracks in the Port Wheel area of Naha. By the early 1960s, the school was hosting Grades 10 through 12.

Finally in 1964, the school moved to its present and permanent location in the Kishaba Terrace housing area, adjacent to the U.S. Army post of Fort Buckner, and was renamed Kubasaki High School.

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