The
History of Yokota High School
Yokota High School derives its name from the
Yokota family that reportedly owned most of the land that stretches
from Fussa station nearly to Tachikawa station. According to legend,
the family provided this portion of its holdings to the Imperial Japanese
Government which transformed the cornfields and pine groves into a
military base in 1938. Finished with construction in 1940, the Japanese
Army called the facility Tama Army Airfield, while local residents
called it Fussa Airfield.
The Japanese Army used the area primarily as a test flight center
during World War II, and the base remained fully operational until
the end of the war. The base sustained only minor damage during the
war, and US forces began operations on September 4, 1945. American
dependents arrived shortly thereafter.
Qualified teachers
and administrators were recruited in the spring of 1946, and the
first dependent school opened September 7, 1946 at Johnson Army
Base in Iramura, about 20 miles from the present location of Yokota
High School. Johnson High was one of several schools whose students
were absorbed when YHS opened in 1973. Other schools in the area
were Tachikawa, located on what is now Showa Park, Chofu High near
ASIJ, and Yamato High which is about five miles away from YHS and
Narimasu.
When Yokota first opened,
the concept was a "school with open doors." Students had
a modular schedule that offered as many as 27 "mods."
The principal was very progressive, and wanted a wide open campus.
At one point in these early years there were 103 different English
classes offered. That modular schedule continued under the next
two principals. Now, the schedule consists of fewer classes which
meet for longer periods, and includes classes offered over the Internet.
Panthers trace their roots over a half century.
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