A century at Huntington High
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A LOOK BACK
I was recently reminded by Ann Minnie of the Huntington Beach High
School Alumni Assn. that on Sunday, the Huntington Beach High School
will be holding its class reunion picnic at Lake Park.
If you are looking for a good old-fashioned hometown picnic that’s
fun for the entire family, this is it.
The picnic will begin at 11 a.m. and last to 3 p.m. For those of
you who attended this picnic in prior years, you know how much fun it
is to meet old school chums and bring up long lost memories. Ann told
me that this year’s alumni president is Sharon Drubin.
I was also reminded that this is also the 100th anniversary of the
Huntington Beach Union High School District as well as the Huntington
Beach City Elementary School District.
This week we will look at the early history of our high school. It
was in 1902 that the school district was founded as the Los Bolsas
Union High School with 20 students enrolled.
Because the school changed from one location to another so often
in those early years that people began calling it the “school on
wheels.”
This new school district was comprised of Bolsa, Chico, Fountain
Valley, Garden Grove, Alamitos, Newhope, Ocean View and Westminster.
All of these attempts were successful in starting a school except
Alamitos. Only one student showed up and so after four days the idea
of a school there was abandoned.
The school received 40 acres out on Bolsa Avenue for a second try
at starting a school, but locals objected strongly and got an
injunction against the school board. So they relocated to the second
floor of the Garden Grove Grammar School in 1904 with Edward Solomon
as the high school principal.
In 1905 the school relocated south to Wintersburg, inside the old
armory building on Warner Avenue and the railroad tracks.
About this time, most of the schools pulled out of the district
except Fountain Valley, Ocean View and Springdale.
Huntington Beach and Newport Beach petitioned to be part of the
district and were received into it.
The high school took to the road again and in 1906 relocated the
high school to the Methodist Camp Ground auditorium at Orange Avenue
and 11th Street.
In that year the California legislature approved a bill submitted
by Senator J.N. Anderson to change the name of the high school from
Los Bolsas Union High to Huntington Beach Union High School and in
1906 the school graduated its first class.
The students were taught English, science, chemistry and languages
from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. and at first there were only
two teachers -- Mr. Crookshank and Miss Wilson.
In that first class were Morris Cain, William Johnson, Stella
Preston and Willis Warner. Cain went on to practice law in Santa Ana,
Preston moved to Athens, Ore., Johnson took up ranching in Tulare and
Warner became an Orange County Supervisor.
A new three-story high school was established here in 1908 at the
corner of Yorktown Avenue and Main Street and in January 1909 the
personal effects of the old school were transferred to this new
school building.
Arthur E. Paine became the principal of Huntington High in 1910
and he also taught history.
About 1913 the school board purchased a two-ton truck and
outfitted it with seats for use as a school bus.
The 1913 graduation class included Mary Hill, Vernon Heil, Flossie
Murdy and Locksley Livernash.
By 1914 enrollment reached 127 students and the faculty included
Paine as principal, Frederic Trover teaching English, M.E. Ross
teaching Algebra, Grace Moore teaching Domestic Science, John Ogle
teaching Agriculture, Vida Ross teaching Latin, Leona Mudgett
teaching Music, Irene Parsons teaching Math and Robert Kegg teaching
Manual Training.
Included in the 1914 graduation class were Clinton Newland, Albert
Isenor, Ruth Harding, Edwin Pann and Theresa and Paul Hallicy.
As the years came and went, the old Mission-style school became
too small, and a new and bigger school was proposed.
The architectural firm of Alison & Alison was hired to draw up the
building plans for this new school. They were chosen because of their
fine work on Royce Hall at UCLA.
The new school was begun with a groundbreaking ceremony on Feb. 8,
1926 at which several students pulled a ceremonial plow guided by
William Newland who was head of the school board.
It was on Sept. 22, 1926 that the Grand Masonic Lodge laid the
cornerstone for the new school. The polished stone was inscribed
“Erected Anno Domini MCMXXVI.”
Behind this stone was placed a time capsule that contained a list
of students, a list of the high school board members, a copy of the
school’s yearbook “The Cauldron,” a copy of the student manual, the
names of the architects, a copy of the Huntington Beach News on that
day, a list of Masonic Lodge members, a copy of the building
contract, photographs of the old school and a copy of the Holy Bible.
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