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The establishment of the Swift and the Armour meat-processing plants on Fort Worth’s North Side at the turn of the twentieth century resulted in the need for new schools for the children of the workers. North Fort Worth High School was built by the Fort Worth Independent School District to address this growth. The Sullivanesque and Wrightian influences of Sanguinet and Staat’s design are evident in both massing and detailing of this red brick building. Focus is on the building’s taller central volume, which lacks a typical portico, and instead the entrances are suppressed into the flanking side wings. The building’s placement at the summit of its sloping site adds to its monumentality. Landscaping and site work improvements were completed in 1937 as a Works Progress Administration project.