La Joya ISD had been home to a single high school entity since the district erected Nellie Schunior Memorial High School in 1926, six years after the death of Nellie Leo Schunior, the first education pioneer in the district's current boundaries. La Joya High School was later created, in order to house the growing number of students that Nellie Schunior Memorial High School could not accommodate. As the years rapidly passed, the communities within the district boundaries began to flourish, and the district population exploded. La Joya High School, being the sole high school within the of land, grew to enormous proportions. For many decades, La Joya High School housed 9-12 grades. Eventually, the student population grew too much and a separate Ninth Grade Campus was built adjacent to La Joya High School. This campus proved to be too small for the 1500 freshman class by the year 2000, so a larger and brand new Ninth Grade Campus was built behind the existing campus, opening its doors to students in October 2000. As the Freshman Class of 2000 was housed at the brand new Ninth Grade Campus, the remodeling project to expand the old Ninth Grade Campus went underway. By the year 2002, La Joya ISD was home to three high schools, but still only had one senior class, as all three campuses shared students. La Joya High School became known as La Joya Senior High School, the newer Ninth Grade Campus changed its name to Juarez-Lincoln High School, and the newly remodeled old Ninth Grade Campus became Jimmy Carter High School. Once again, population spurts in western Hidalgo County contributed to overcrowding at all three high schools. La Joya ISD had no choice but to split the district into three completely separate high schools, and for the first time ever, have multiple senior classes, multiple sports teams, and multiple mascots. The 2008-2009 school year became the inaugural year for both the Juarez-Lincoln Huskies and the Palmview Lobos. With a much smaller student population, Juarez-Lincoln High School was classified as a 4A school, but Palmview High School, with a student population parallel with La Joya High School, was classified as a 5A school.
Juarez-Lincoln High School history
Juarez-Lincoln High School opened its permanent campus doors to its student population in January 2011. The school had been housed at the old campus from August 2008 through December 2010. The school was reclassified in the 2012 UIL realignment as a 5A high school, and joined its sister schools in the UIL rosters for athletic and fine art contests. Later, in 2014, UIL renamed all classifications in the state, and all three LJISD schools became Class 6A schools, which are schools with student enrollments of 2100+.
The Juarez-Lincoln High School Fine Arts Department is a very large department, with a large percentage of the student body participating in at least one of these departments.
Juarez-Lincoln High School's school song, "Alma Mater", uses the music of La Joya High School's original Alma Mater. The words to the song were written by the Student Council in 2009 with the help of teacher Ana Loya.
Fight Song
Juarez-Lincoln High School's fight song uses Texas A&M's "Aggie War Hymn".