Thurgood Marshall Secondary School


Thurgood Marshall Secondary School is a secondary school located in Pasadena, California, United States, at 990 North Allen Avenue, and is part of the Pasadena Unified School District.

History

Construction of Thurgood Marshall Secondary School broke ground in 1924, and the primary building was completed in 1925. The building was severely damaged in the 1933 Long Beach Earthquake, causing extensive reconstruction, not opening again until the 1940 school year. Several expansions occurred in the following decades; in the 1950s, 1970s, 2000s and 2010s.
Marshall was a junior high school for nearly fifty years, from its opening until the 1971–1972 school year, when it was closed briefly. For the 1973–1974 school year, it reopened as a secondary school. In 1976, grades kindergarten through sixth were moved to other Pasadena campuses Longfellow Elementary and Washington Elementary, but the sixth grade level was reinstated during the 1985–1986 year.
In 2001, the school was used as a set for filming the 2001 movie Max Keeble's Big Move.
In late 2024, the school issued a proposal to the Governing Board of the Pasadena Unified School District for approval in changing its name from "John Marshall Fundamental Secondary School" to "Thurgood Marshall Secondary School." John Marshall, the school's former namesake, was a known slave owner. Thurgood Marshall, the namesake of the proposed name change, was the first African-American Supreme Court Justice. On April 16th, 2025, the Governing Board approved the renaming, and Thurgood Marshall Secondary School unveiled and celebrated the name change at a celebration of the school's centennial on May 9, 2025.
On February 7th, 2025, students at Thurgood Marshall Secondary School staged a walkout alongside four other nearby high schools.

Curriculum

Marshall offers the following Advanced Placement courses.

Sports

The teams are named the Marshall Eagles, after the school's mascot, and their uniforms beat the school's colors of white, blue, and red. Some teams use different colors for away games.
The sports at Marshall include:

Academic performance

Jay Mathews, an educator and education reporter for the Washington Post, listed Thurgood Marshall Secondary School as the 130th best high school as of 2007, chiefly due to its vast number of underprivileged students, high graduation rate, and 70% free and reduced lunch program. It was featured on the cover of Newsweek magazine, indicated as one of America's best schools. Marshall was first posted in 2003 as 119th, but fell in the following years to 255 in 2005, and 286 in 2006. It saw a jump in the 2012 school year, rising 156 places, back into the top 10%. Marshall in 2017 was ranked 897 overall in the nation and 152 in California.
As of 2022, Marshall is ranked by U.S. News & World Report as being the 190th-ranked high school in California and the 1,303rd ranked high school in the nation.

Notable alumni