Englewood High School - Chicago

Englewood High School - Chicago The original Englewood High School (The Towers), home of the "Mighty Eagles", was originally constructed in 1874. Englwood was rebuilt in 1979.

Englewood High School has been known as Englewood Technical Preparatory Academy since 1983. The records of Englewood High School reveal that school and its administrators to have been innovators in the file of public education. The Englewood High School Records are available to the public for research in the Special Collections and Preservation Division Reading Room on the 9th floor of the Chicago

Public Library's Harold Washington Library Center, 400 South State Street, Chicago, Illinois, 60605. Duplicate materials and selected photocopies have been returned to the Hiram Kelly Branch Library. Englewood was rebuilt in 1979. The school graduated its last class of 151 students in June 2008. Englewood was closed as an action in the CPS Renaissance 2010 program. There are two new schools currently using the same building: Urban Prep Academy; a public charter high school for young men (opened in 2006) and TEAM Englewood; a public coed charter school that opened in 2007. Team Englewood still uses the Englewood High School team name the Eagles.

Nichelle Nichols An Englewood Eagle!!!!
12/28/2021

Nichelle Nichols
An Englewood Eagle!!!!

Happy birthday to groundbreaking actress Nichelle Nichols, who was the first African-American woman to star in lead role on a television series. Nichols starred as Communication Officer Lieutenant Uhura on the popular sci-fi television show “Star Trek.”

📸: Fotos International/Getty

06/10/2021

c. 1948 – Two African American Englewood High School (Chicago Public Schools) students featured on the April 1948 cover of Chicago, Illinois based EBONY magazine. Chicago, Illinois, United States

Chicago, Illinois, United States
📷: Unknown/Johnson Publishing Company Archives

Yosh Yamada - at 2008 Reunion, with 1958 Championship Team and playing golf
05/21/2021

Yosh Yamada - at 2008 Reunion, with 1958 Championship Team and playing golf

[Sad news, Eagles]The football players he coached at Englewood High School said the racial prejudice Yoshio “Yosh” Yamad...
05/21/2021

[Sad news, Eagles]
The football players he coached at Englewood High School said the racial prejudice Yoshio “Yosh” Yamada experienced as a Japanese American during World War II helped him empathize with his Black students.
“He was in one of the internment camps during the war, so he understood the oppression of Black people,” said Charles Hudson, 73, a 1967 graduate who played guard on the Englewood Eagles football team. “That was like being in prison. I think he just felt he had to help underprivileged people like Black people.”
Mr. Yamada called himself “a coach-counselor” in a 1965 interview with the Chicago Daily News.
“I know that athletics help to keep many boys in school that would otherwise drop out,” he said. “If I see a boy on the verge of quitting, I’ll give him more responsibility. . .make him feel he’s needed.”
Mr. Yamada died last month in Sacramento, where he’d moved to be closer to his sister June Tamanaha and his extended family. He was 94 and suffered from heart failure and kidney disease, according to his nephew Steve Tamanaha.
A respected coach, athletic director and gym teacher, he was a familiar figure on the South Side. He worked at Englewood High School from 1952 until his retirement in 1991, coaching from the 1950s into the 1970s, and lived for a time in Bronzeville’s Lake Meadows apartments.
His students respected his no-nonsense style on the field and in the driver’s education courses he taught.
“If you messed up,” Hudson said, “he would let you know: ‘You’re going to the prom by CTA.’ ”
And when his players didn’t have money for extras or essentials, “He’d get them socks and things like that,” Hudson said.
“I never kept track of how much money I took out of my own pocket to pay for equipment, shoes, carfare or meals,” Mr. Yamada once said in a Chicago Sun-Times interview. “I used to pay for trips to colleges, so I could show them what they had to look forward to if they became good football players.”
“He was inspiring,” said Eugene Hudson, 73, who played fullback for Mr. Yamada at Englewood. “Most of his players went to college.”
Eugene Hudson, who worked for Western Electric, and Charles Hudson, who went on to a career with the Chicago Public Schools that included coaching football at Englewood, credit Mr. Yamada with helping them get into Morehouse College.
Both men are relatives of Jennifer Hudson, the Chicago-raised singer and actor. When three members of her family were killed in 2008, Mr. Yamada was invited to the funeral for her mother Darnell Donerson, brother Jason and nephew Julian, according to Eugene Hudson, who is an uncle of the Academy Award-winner.
“He sat with the family,” said Charles, a first cousin of Darnell Donerson. “That did us a lot of good to see Coach show up.”
Mr. Yamada grew up in Oakland, California. He was the second youngest of nine children of Masayo and Masaoki Yamada, natives of Yamanashi prefecture in Japan. His father died when he was a child, and his mother operated a small laundry business.
Mr. Yamada later wrote about the day the U.S. government ordered his family into captivity. They wound up at Topaz Internment Camp near Delta, Utah.
“One Friday afternoon in 1942 when I was 15 years old, my family got a knock on the door,” he wrote. “When my mother answered she was told to take my eight brothers and sisters and me to our church on Sunday to be delivered to a camp. My family was sent by train to an internment camp in Utah where we remained for 2-and-a-half years.
“We lost everything, including our home and business in Oakland. I. . . graduated from the high school in the camp where we often moved about with guns pointing at us.”
Topaz initially wasn’t ready for internees, so the Yamadas were first housed at Tanforan, a former racetrack near San Francisco.
“All the manure was still below the floorboards, so it really stunk,” said Mr. Yamada’s niece Paula Mishima.
Mishima said her mother Miye told her life at Topaz meant “having to wait in line for everything and how there was no privacy, how cold it was and how dusty it was.”..At Englewood, his players won the Chicago Public League’s first Blue Division championship in 1958. He coached them against Hyde Park High School in what’s been called the oldest football rivalry in the state...In 1991, the year he retired, Mr. Yamada received a $20,000 reparations check from the U.S. government for his internment.
“There never was any evidence that any of us had done anything against the United States,” he told the Sun-Times then. “These reparations are too little and too late.”..When he retired, Mr. Yamada told the Sun-Times, “Working in the public schools gave me a chance to do something for minorities, especially in the Black community, to help repay for some of the things that were given to me.
“I have no regrets. It was enjoyable to work with kids. They never discriminated against me.”

After being held at the Topaz Internment Camp, he was drafted into the Army, where, he later wrote, ‘I served the very country that had imprisoned me.’

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