The Redskins name and logo appear in the Port Townsend High School gymnasium in this photo taken last spring.  -- Peninsula Daily News photo

The Redskins name and logo appear in the Port Townsend High School gymnasium in this photo taken last spring. -- Peninsula Daily News photo

Port Townsend High School heads into final year with Redskins mascot

PORT TOWNSEND — The replacement of the Redskins mascot for Port Townsend High School with one that is less racially charged will not be resolved until the end of the upcoming school year, according to the school district superintendent.

David Engle said Monday that the district will begin seeking volunteers in three areas — the staff, the community and the students — to assemble and make recommendations for a new mascot for the school’s athletes.

Port Townsend teams will play as the Redskins during the upcoming school year, but the coaches have been instructed that this is the time for them “to say goodbye to the mascot,” Engle said.

The school’s colors — red and white with black highlights — will not change, Engle said.

The board unanimously voted June 24 to retire the name of Redskins “with honor and dignity” and conduct a “student- and community-based process to replace it.”

Additionally, the board voted to adopt a curriculum that teaches the history of Native Americans and is meant to promote racial sensitivity.

This followed a yearlong process involving a committee that examined community response to the mascot and issued findings that the mascot had a negative effect on the district.

As outlined by Engle, the three committees will meet separately to develop recommendations and then together to make the final selection.

Engle said board members were free to be involved in the process, though he recommended against their involvement because of the controversy of the board’s decision to retire the mascot created.

“We want this decision to be generally owned,” he said.

“We’ve taken enough heat on this already.

“The board won’t be involved in the selection of the new mascot, although they will vote to approve the final recommendation,” he added.

“I won’t be involved in the selection, but I will be working to implement the new curriculum.”

Engle said 15 or 16 people will be recruited for each committee, although the staff group could have fewer people.

“Anyone who serves on the committees will need to be committed to changing the mascot,” Engle said.

“This is not the place for people who want to stop the process.”

Each group will meet three or four times during the first part of the school year, with joint meetings to take place from March to May.

A final decision will be addressed at the June 2 School Board meeting, according to the schedule.

While the committees will operate separately, newly hired Athletic Director Scott R. Wilson will be “the de facto head of the process,” Engle said.

During the Redskins mascot’s 88-year lifespan, several efforts have been mounted to replace it with another symbol, but the board did not take action on the matter until this year.

High school Principal Carrie Ehrhardt told the board that many people at the school favor a new mascot with a two-syllable name as it will allow existing cheers to be easily rewritten.

________

Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

A Clallam County Public Utilities District worker trims sycamore trees on East Washington Street near the Bell Creek Plaza shopping complex in Sequim on Wednesday as part of an effort to clear branches that may interfere with nearby power lines. The clearing helps pave the way for eventual maintenance on the PUD lines. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Clearing the line

A Clallam County Public Utilities District worker trims sycamore trees on East… Continue reading

Funding cuts to hit WSU extensions

Local food purchase program most impacted

Kaylee Oldemeyer, a second-year nursing student, is among those selling tickets for the Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby this Sunday. (Leah Leach/for Peninsula Daily News)
Peninsula College nursing program students selling ducks for annual derby

Olympic Medical Center Foundation to give proceeds for scholarships

Jefferson County library to host preparedness discussion

Talk to cover water systems, food resiliency

Author Caroline Fraser, whose book, “Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder,” won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for biography, is speaking at today’s Studium Generale at Peninsula College. She will talk about Wilder as well as her latest book, “Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers.” (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Pulitzer Prize-winning author to speak in Port Angeles

Caroline Fraser featured as Writer-in-Residence at Peninsula College

Ty Coone. (Clallam County Sheriff's Office)
Search suspended for kayaker missing in Strait

The U.S. Coast Guard suspended its search Wednesday morning for… Continue reading

Clallam County and Astound are partnering with assistance from Clallam County PUD on a $22 million project that will extend Astound’s existing fiber network near Laird’s Corner to almost 100 miles of new above ground and underground infrastructure that will reach more than 1,500 homes in the Highway 112 corridor.
High-speed internet coming to Highway 112 corridor

Clallam County, PUD and Astound involved in $22M project

State leaders discuss budget

Importance of gas tax explained

Conservation measures requested on water system west of Sekiu

Clallam County Public Utility District No. 1 has issued a… Continue reading

Supreme Court justice addresses law day event

Clallam-Jefferson Pro Bono Lawyers hosted an observance of Law… Continue reading

Charter Review Commission to consider seven issues

The Clallam County Charter Review Commission has launched a… Continue reading