Construction of TCHS was funded by a half-cent
sales tax approved by county residents. Culpepper Construction Company of
Tallahassee secured a $60.8 million contract to build the school, and the school was designed by
Orlando-based SchenkelShultz Architecture. In December 2020, the school announced its nickname would be the
Toros with school colors of burnt orange, gunmetal gray, and black. The Toros logo and visual identity was designed by Rhodes Branding, a marketing agency based in
Columbia, South Carolina. During the mascot naming process, the school's inaugural principal, Jay Willets, said that bulls or toros would be an appropriate name because the land the school now sits on was a cow pasture prior to the school's construction. This land was formerly owned by the
Pacetti family who sold the 68.79
acre plot to the school district for just over $7 million in August 2019. TCHS was initially anticipated to open to students on August 10, 2021, but the St. Johns County school board voted to delay the start of the county's 2021-22 school year by 6 days, in part to give a cushion for more time to complete construction projects at TCHS and Pine Island Academy, a new
Kindergarten through eighth grade school in the county.
Controversy In August 2022, an incident between TCHS assistant principal Erin Lynn and dean and football coach Jerry Kyle Skipper sparked an investigation by the school district. The incident involved sexual misconduct in the workplace between Lynn and Skipper, and both were put on administrative leave by the school district for inappropriate actions in November 2022. Lynn resigned four days after being put on administrative leave while Skipper faced termination for "interactions with another colleague that involved flirtatious and sexual misconduct in and out of the workplace." == Athletics ==