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District
History
A tradition
of excellence in education began with the creation of the Tustin community
in the late 1800s. The District was established July 1, 1972 upon
unification of the Tustin Elementary School District and Tustin Union High
School District.
A Legacy
of Excellence
The legacy
of Tustin's schools dates back to the 1860s - two decades before Orange
County became independent of Los Angeles.
Education
was a priority of Tustin's namesake and community developer Columbus
Tustin, a Petaluma carriage maker who purchased 839 acres in the 1860s and
plotted streets and square blocks through a terrain of wild mustard and
sycamore trees.
In 1872, he
built a one-room schoolhouse and donated it to the community. Originally
called Sycamore School District because of the abundant sycamore trees in
the foothills, its first trustees were elected by 11 voters. Residents
also approved a tax rate to provide $740 to build a larger schoolhouse and
$300 for school supplies. The District's first teacher, Miss Annie Cozad,
was paid $60 per month; its second teacher came five years later.
Tustin's
plans for a large city were temporarily waylaid in 1877 when Southern
Pacific Railroad built its southern terminus in Santa Ana instead of
Tustin. Columbus Tustin died in 1883 just as the community's population
began to grow with new homes, stores, places of worship, and an addition
to the school.
The school
district was renamed the Tustin School District with the creation of the
County of Orange in 1889. After the turn of the century, Tustin grew as
the upscale residential suburb of Santa Ana, the county seat of
government. Tustin's homes and businesses reflected that upscale lifestyle
and so did its schools.
Growth in
the early 20th Century mirrored that of many Orange County communities
with larger schools built to accommodate an expanding population. Tustin
Union High School opened in 1922 and served five elementary school
districts: Tustin, San Joaquin, Trabuco, El Toro, and Laguna.
Residents
voted for unification in 1972 and Tustin's elementary and high schools
were unified as a single district - Tustin Unified School District.
Today the District serves
over 23,000 students at 18 elementary schools, a K-8 school, 5 middle
schools, and 4 high schools. Its administrative center is located at 300
South C Street in Tustin.
District
Administration Center
and School Bell
The Tustin
Unified School District offices are in the remodeled grammar school
auditorium, built in 1950. After the grammar school was vacated, the
elementary district administration moved from the Little Red School House
into this building. The bell, cast in 1887, originally hung in the old
Victorian schoolhouse and today welcomes visitors to the District
Administration Center at 300 South C Street in Tustin.
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