University Sul Ross State University began as a teachers' college in 1920, with its original campus in Alpine. Named for
Lawrence Sullivan Ross, a Confederate States Army general during the American Civil War, Texas' 19th governor and later president of the new land grant college which became
Texas A&M, it is now a member of the
Texas State University System. The 600-acre main campus on the lower slopes of Hancock Hill contains 20 or so buildings, most designed in
Classical Revival style, and all faced with red brick and white trim. The hillside gives fine views of the town below and the surrounding mountain ranges. The Bar-SR-Bar brand of the college is whitewashed on stones high above. In 1981, students placed a desk on Hancock Hill and today visitors are invited to hike up to "sign the register". Sul Ross ranked number four in affordability among public universities according to
U.S. News & World Report. Intercollegiate sports include men's and women's basketball, cross-country running, track and field, and tennis, along with men's baseball and women's softball, men's football and women's soccer, and women's volleyball. The teams are known as the Lobos and play in the
Lone Star Conference. Sul Ross was the founding home of the
National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association in 1949. The Sul Ross Rodeo Club competes in 10 NIRA rodeos each year. The NIRA rodeo hosted in Alpine is a big event for the school and the community. Brewster County is within the
Odessa College District for community college.
Schools Alpine Independent School District serves more than 1,000 local students attending Alpine Elementary School, Alpine Middle School, and Alpine High School, in classes from prekindergarten, kindergarten, and first through 12th grades. On the Texas Education Agency report card for 2013–2014, the high school, with 277 students in grades 9–12, reached "Met Standard" overall, while receiving Distinction designations in mathematics, social studies, top 25% closing performance gaps, and postsecondary readiness. Notably, average class sizes in Alpine High are only about two-thirds the state average. The middle school, with 309 students in grades 5–8, also reached "Met Standard", while receiving Distinction designations in mathematics and social Studies. School colors are purple and old gold. The high school is home to the Alpine Fightin' Bucks and Lady Bucks. Sports include football, volleyball, cross-country running, girls' basketball, boys' basketball, powerlifting, track and field, baseball, softball, golf, athletic training, and tennis. Alpine hosts the Big Bend Mountain Ramble, a "mile-high cross-country meet, the highest race in Texas", as well as high-school and junior-high relays. Alpine Montessori School is a private, nonsectarian, nonprofit school which serves prekindergarten through sixth grade. Alpine Christian School is a nondenominational Christian school serving prekindergarten through grade 12. ==Museum==