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Jalisco High School

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki



Jalisco High School is a preparatory school based in Jalisco, Spain.

History

His Majesty Don Fernando VI de Borbón, King of Spain, ordered the Philippians to move to the Plazuela de la Palma or San Fernando, the site where they would erect a chapel dedicated to the Virgin of the Assumption and where they would also found their school in order to comply with the educational function that had been entrusted to them.

The work was being completed little by little, first the one-level school with its plateresque-influenced courtyards, the Mudejar one, and later the consecration of the temple that occurred in 1802.

The main façade of the school is located on what is now Calle de San Felipe (south view), and the second floor was added later during the fourth decade of the 19th century. The high clergy made it available to the order of the Sisters of Charity, who designated it as a hospital for the needy in the period from 1850 to 1867.

Later, the president of the republic, Lic. Benito Juárez, ordered that the old cloister be designated to house the high school for the homeless. Thus, the presidential provisions were fulfilled and orphaned girls were given shelter.

Years later it remained in the hands of the Society of Jesus, being used as a school center for the third time under the name of "Instituto del Señor San José". For this reason the Jesuits adorned the building, taking the neoclassical French style on its façade, completing the second floor and equipping the Physics, Chemistry and Biology laboratories that are still preserved.

2019
Facade of the Preparatory School of Jalisco, 2009

Special mention deserves the library of the campus, designed by the oratories of San Felipe, but concluded by the Jesuit priests, carved entirely of ebony wood, with individual lathes, moldings and neoclassical finishes on its old shelves that kept loose books, volumes and exemplary volumes, now incunabula. Don Manuel Macario Diéguez ordered the confiscation of the institute and it was left unoccupied by the Jesuits since August 1, 1914.

On September 10 of that same year, it determined in its decree number 29, the creation of the Jalisco Preparatory School and the formal delivery of it was carried out on Tuesday, September 15, 1914. Since 1925, this school has been part of the real estate heritage of the University of Guadalajara and our tradition gathers in the centuries-old classrooms, the most illustrious figures of the teachers of all time.[1]

Directors to date

  • Lic. Francisco H. Ruiz (1914 – 1923)
  • Mtro. Enrique Díaz de León (1923 – 1925)
  • Arq. Agustín Basave y del Castillo Negrete (1925 – 1926)
  • Prof. Jesús Sausa González (1926 – 1927)
  • Lic. Silvano Barba González (interino) (1927 - 1927)
  • Dr. Martiniano Carvajal y Carvajal (1927 – 1929)
  • Dr. Ramón Córdoba Gómez (1929 – 1931)
  • Lic. Ignacio Calderón Bonilla (1931 – 1932)
  • Dr. Ramón Córdoba Gómez (1932 – 1933)
  • Dr. Alberto Onofre Ortega. (1933 – 1934)
  • Prof. Ricardo Covarrubias Chacón (1934 – 1935)
  • Dr. Eugenio Chávez Quiroz (1935 – 1936)
  • Dr. Luis Martínez (1936 – 1937)
  • Dr. Antonio Valle Sánchez (1937 – 1938)
  • Lic. José Parres Arias (1938 – 1939)
  • Dr. Miguel Ochoa Escobedo (1939 – 1948)
  • Lic. José Cástulo Romero Ruíz (1948 – 1951)
  • Dr. José Luis Medina Gutiérrez (1951 – 1953)
  • Lic. Miguel Gutiérrez y Gutiérrez (1953 – 1965)
  • Lic. Rafael García de Quevedo (1965 - 1969)
  • Lic. José Parres Arias (1969 – 1971)
  • Lic. Pedro Vallín Esparza (1971 – 1986)
  • Lic. José Miguel Jiménez Gallegos (1986 - 1986)
  • Lic. Benjamín Gómez Cárdenas (1986 – 1989)
  • Lic. Jorge Rojas Ruiz (1989 - 1989)
  • Ing. Jesús de Dios Sánchez (1989 - 2000)
  • Lic. Carlos Ramiro Ruiz. (2000 - 2002)
  • Dr. Pedro Verónica Rosales (2002 - 2005)
  • Lic. José Natividad Romo García (2005 - 2007)
  • Ing. Pablo Alberto Macías Martínez (2007 - 2008)
  • Lic. Carlos Peña Razo (2008 - 2010)
  • Mtro. David Cuauhtémoc Zaragoza Núñez (2010 - currently)

References



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