Countdown to 2000: Schools
- Share via
Greg Risling
The school system that for nearly two decades had experienced burgeoning
growing pains began to prosper in the 1950s with new development.
Not only was the decade a time of change with the addition of a new high
school to alleviate enrollment problems at Newport Harbor High, but
discussions swirled around combining all three school districts to form a
unified district.
School administrators were faced foremost with a shortage of classrooms
and a growing population. The most significant shortage was at the area’s
lone high school, Newport Harbor, where the student body swelled to
capacity with 1,253 students.
Noting the inevitable, school board members agreed in 1953 that a second
high school should be built. After taking nearly three years to find
funding and a site, Costa Mesa High School was approved on Sept. 12,
1956. The high school was built on part of a 70-acre acquisition from the
U.S. Army between Fairview Road and Harbor Boulevard.
School officials were also ecstatic about the area’s new intermediate
school that was financed by a $95,000 bond measurein 1952 and an
allocation of $1.5 million from the state. The result was Rea School,
which opened its doors in April 1953 to nearly 400 seventh- and
eighth-graders.
Meanwhile, in Newport Beach, school district officials were facing
similar problems. In order to address projected growth figures over the
next 15 years, they decided to open an elementary school reserved for
fifth- and sixth-graders called Harbor View, in 1953. Six years later,
another school was built -- Mariners Elementary -- pushing the city’s
total to five schools.
At the close of the decade, school officials were belabored by the
disjointed bureaucracy of running three different school districts.
Funding was always a No. 1 priority for each district and it was evident
that a combined effort by all three would serve the schools best.
Yet in December 1959, there was another bond issue staring administrators
straight in the face. They were asking for $1.8 million to build a new
intermediate school, two elementary schools and the possibility for the
area’s third high school. Officials were also looking at population
figures, which were estimated to bring another 2,000 students to the area
by 1965.
Sources: Costa Mesa Globe-Herald, 1952-1959; “Newport Beach 75:
1906-1981” by James P. Felton, 1981.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.