The original Bremerton High School was founded in the 1920s with the first bremerton high school building. From at least the 1940s, the school was located in West Bremerton. In 1957 the school was split into West High School and East High School, located across the Port Washington Narrows in East Bremerton, on Wheaton Way. In 1978, "Bremerton High School" returned when East and West were combined, and its first commencement was held on June 8, 1979. Ronald K. Gillespie, former principal of West High School, was the first principal of the new Bremerton High. For the first few years, BHS occupied the buildings of former East High School. Then in September 1988, following the completion of a new facility at the original location of Bremerton/West High, the student body was moved back across the water to 1500 13th Street.
School colors and mascot
Bremerton High School's mascot is a Knight carrying The Sword of Justice and The Cape of Truth. The Cape of Truth was handmade by Marialis Jurges and introduced by the Class of 1996. During the Class of 2012 graduation, a second mascot, the Page was introduced. She now accompanies the Knight at all school gatherings. The school's traditional colors are Royal Blue and Gold. The official emblem is a Knight on a horse carrying a lance surrounded by a major arc with "Bremerton High School" written upon it. The origin of the school colors and mascot comes from the unification of West Bremerton Wildcats, whose colors were blue and gold, and the East Bremerton Knights, whose colors were black and white. They chose the colors of West Bremerton and the mascot of East Bremerton giving us Bremerton High School's Knight along with Royal Blue and Gold as its colors. The Bremerton High School yearbook is known as "The Gauntlet."
Academics
Bremerton High School offers many honors and advanced placement classes:
Language and Composition
Literature and Composition
Biology
Chemistry
Environmental Science
Calculus
Statistics
Human Geography
Psychology
World History
US History
Studio Art
Art History
Controversy
In the fall of 2015, BHS drew national attention over assistant football coach, Joe Kennedy, and his seven year old practice of taking a knee and praying at the 50-yard line after varsity and JV games. School Superintendent Aaron Leavell, declared in September that Kennedy was in violation of federal court rulings and school district policy. Initially Kennedy bowed to Leavell's order, but in October, after acquiring legal advice and defense from the Liberty Institute, coach Kennedy resumed his post-game prayer. Kennedy was put on paid leave on October 29, 2015. See the school district statement: https://web.archive.org/web/20151105193737/http://www.bremertonschools.org/cms/lib/WA01001541/Centricity/domain/4/2015%20pattys%20uploads/Bremerton%20Public%20Statement%20-%2010.28.15.pdf.