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Tamalpais High School
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Tamalpais High School : ウィキペディア英語版
Tamalpais High School

Tamalpais High School (often abbreviated as Tam) is a public secondary school located in Mill Valley, California. It is named after nearby Mount Tamalpais, which rises more than above Mill Valley.
Tamalpais High School is the original campus of the Tamalpais Union High School District and the second public high school in Marin County. As of 2007, Tam's attendance area includes the cities of Mill Valley and Sausalito, the nearby unincorporated areas of Marin City, Strawberry and Tamalpais-Homestead Valley, and the West Marin communities of Muir Beach, Bolinas and Stinson Beach.〔"(SCHOOLS in the Tamalpais Union High School District and communities served )." Tamalpais Union High School District. Retrieved on April 1, 2010.〕 Mill Valley School District is the largest feeder for Tam, followed by the Sausalito Marin City School District and the Bolinas-Stinson Union School District.
==History==

Tamalpais Union High School District was founded in 1907, to serve students from the Mill Valley Elementary and Sausalito Elementary School Districts who had previously commuted to San Rafael to continue their education. Tamalpais Union High School held its first classes on August 4, 1908, in tent-like structures.〔Whitiker, Tad, ("Tam High to mark its 100th year with fanfare" ), ''Marin Independent Journal'', September 18, 2007, accessed March 3, 2008〕〔 〕 The school opened with 70 students, including 40 freshmen, 21 sophomores, five juniors, and four seniors.〔 〕 Ernest E. Wood took the lead in founding the District and was the first principal.〔(Mill Valley Masons, Golden Anniversary, 1953 ), accessed February 26, 2008〕 By its second year, there were six teachers, 100 students, and 300 volumes in the school library.〔(California State Library, ''News Notes of California Libraries'', Vol. 5, No. 3, page 303, 1910 ), accessed February 26, 2008〕 By 1913–1914 enrollment had increased to 175, with 8 faculty; the library holdings had grown to 650 books plus subscriptions to eight magazines and 2 newspapers.〔(California State Library, ''News Notes of California Libraries'', Vol. 9, No. 2, page 308, April 1914 ), accessed February 26, 2008〕 E. E. Wood was principal for 36 years, until 1944.
Known in its early years as Tamalpais Polytechnic High School, Tam was a comprehensive high school from its beginning, with a curriculum that included both academic subjects and technical training. In an interview with the local newspaper the year before he died, Principal Wood said, "I believe the students learned by doing things, I believe in the philosophy of students getting in and doing work and accomplishing things."〔 Architecture students designed the first building and students built several structures on the campus.

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