Originally constructed to take the place of the Lee-Jackson High School, Mount Vernon High school first opened in November 1939.[3][4] With the opening of the school, Lee-Jackson principal G. Claude Cox moved to Mount Vernon, becoming the school's first principal, and Lee-Jackson became an elementary school.[5]
In 1945, Principal Cox resigned to become principal of Wythe High School in Wytheville, Virginia, and Lee-Jackson principal Melvin B. Landes moved to Mount Vernon to begin a nearly thirty-year tenure there.[5][6]
The school's current location was built in 1961 as Walt Whitman Intermediate School. In 1973, Mount Vernon and Whitman swapped facilities, and the former intermediate school was enlarged to serve its new role as a high school. The original Mount Vernon High School continued to operate as the Walt Whitman Intermediate School until 1985, when Whitman was moved to the former Stephen Foster Intermediate School.[7]
Also in 1973, Principal Melvin Landes retired, and Thomas G. Hyer took over as Principal.[6]
Following the departure of Eric Brent to become principal at Forest Park High School in Woodbridge, Nardos King became the principal of MVHS in 2006.[8]
After nine years as principal, Nardos King resigned in 2015 to take a position as Assistant Superintendent of High Schools with the Baltimore County Public Schools system. Assistant Principal Esther Manns became the interim principal of MVHS in September 2015.[9] In February 2016, Rocky Run Middle School Principal Dr. Anthony S. Terrell was announced as the principal of Mount Vernon High School, beginning in March.
The original Mount Vernon High School is still standing on Richmond Highway; it became the Islamic Saudi Academy, which moved to the facility in 1989.[10] This school closed in 2016.
Students with individual needs are accommodated through special education programs, including English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) program, and advanced placement and International Baccalaureate programs. Mount Vernon is an accredited high school.[11] The average SAT score in 2013 for Mount Vernon was a 1417 (479 in Critical Reading, 474 in Math, and 464 in Writing).[12]
School athletic programs feature fall, winter and spring sports, including cheerleading, cross country, field hockey, football, golf, volleyball, basketball, gymnastics, swimming, wrestling, baseball, crew, lacrosse, softball, soccer, tennis, track and intramural sports.
In Mount Vernon's history, it has garnered five AAA State Championship titles. They won their first title in 1979, in basketball, their second in 1983, for football, their third in 2008 for the swim & dive team, and a fourth in 2013, for soccer, as well as one[when?] for wrestling.
Mount Vernon's "Little Theater," officially named "The Andrew Lee Pauley Theater," was dedicated to an English and Drama teacher who retired from the school in 1986. The Little Theater can hold a capacity of more than 400 students.
It is home to MVHS Theatre Arts program, under the direction of theater teacher Jessica Shaw.
^"Mount Vernon High". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
^"Fairfax Delays Opening of White Schools: Incompletion of Buildings Is Given As Reason for Lag". The Washington Post. 31 August 1939. ProQuest151154652.
^"Fairfax Board Accepts School Material Bids". The Washington Post. 8 November 1939. ProQuest151120045.
^ ab"G.C. Cox Resigns As Mount Vernon School Principal". The Washington Post. 23 August 1945. ProQuest151818990.
^ ab"Melvin Bowman Landes, Alexandria Principal". The Washington Post. 24 August 2004. Retrieved 10 September 2015.This reference incorrectly states that Landes was principal of Lee-Jackson Elementary School in Mathews, Virginia. Landes was principal of Lee-Jackson Elementary in Alexandria.
^Mansfield, Virginia (4 August 1988). "Saudi Academy To Fund Fairfax School Face Lift". The Washington Post. ProQuest139468084.