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Fort Vancouver High School, known as FVHS and Fort Vancouver High School Center for International Studies, [1] is a public high school located in Vancouver, Washington.FVHS is named after Fort Vancouver, an early trading outpost built in 1824-25 near the banks of the Columbia River, a few miles from where the school is located.
The district has 36 schools: 21 elementary schools (PK-Grade 5) 6 middle schools (Grades 6-8) 5 high schools (Grades 9 to 12) Vancouver High School stood for many years at the intersection of Columbia and West Fourth Plain Boulevard, but was closed in the mid-1950s, with students divided between two new schools: Fort Vancouver High School and Hudson's Bay High School.
Fort Vancouver High School; H. Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School; Heritage High School (Vancouver, Washington) Hudson's Bay High School; L.
Jun. 10—There was no stopping W.F. West of Chehalis, but the Fort Vancouver bowling team gave the Bearcats a good run. W.F. West won the team title and Piper Chalmers took the individual crown ...
FVHS may refer to: . Forest View High School (Illinois), a defunct school in Arlington Heights, Illinois, United States Forest View High School, Tokoroa, in New Zealand; Fort Vancouver High School in Vancouver, Washington, United States
The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA) is the governing body of athletics and activities for secondary education schools in the state of Washington.As of October 2024, the private, 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization consists of nearly 800 member high schools and middle/junior high schools, both public and private.
Hudson's Bay High School is a public high school in the Central Park area of Vancouver, Washington, and is part of Vancouver Public Schools.It was founded in 1955 [3] and was named after the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC), as Fort Vancouver had been chosen, in 1821, as the HBC base of operations on the Pacific Slope.
Dils played high school football at Fort Vancouver High School in Vancouver, Washington, and attended Stanford University.He was Stanford's starting quarterback under Bill Walsh in 1978, and led Stanford to a 25–22 victory over Georgia in the 1978 Bluebonnet Bowl, where he was named the game's offensive most valuable player.