Point Loma High School Turns 100 on September 8
by Scott Hopkins / Pen. Beacon – Times of San Diego / Sept. 2, 2025
It was a time of rapid growth in San Diego. The little seaside community was home to 74,683 people in 1920, and that total would double to 147,897 by the end of the decade. The city was already home to a pair of high schools. Russ School, later named San Diego High School, opened in 1892, and La Jolla High School opened to the north in 1922.
HASTINGS’ FOLLY
Edgar F. Hastings, a member of the Board of Education, believed that a new high school was needed in a slowly developing community situated between San Diego Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Fellow board members strongly disagreed with Hastings, saying the proposed location was too far from town.
But Hastings persisted, even after his fellow board members termed the proposed new school “Hastings’ Folly.”
And, on Sept. 8, 1925, Point Loma Junior-Senior High School opened.
Pete Ross was named as the school’s first principal, and the school’s stadium bears his name today.
Ross oversaw a staff of 30 teachers who drove their Model Ts to the campus that had no homes around it. They parked their cars in a staff parking lot along Zola Street before walking onto the new campus built in Spanish Revival architecture with three-story buildings featuring curved archways and wrought iron.
Those teachers were expected to deliver a rich and challenging curriculum to each of the 386 students in grades 7 through 12 who arrived on the first day of school. After all, those teachers were making $90 per month, according to federal records.

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