Remembering a school of many names
Young Chang
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District is huge today. With 30
total schools, the district educates more than 21,000 students. But
early scholarly endeavors in Costa Mesa had humble origins. There
weren’t that many schools and high school student had to travel to
Santa Ana to attend Santa Ana High School in the early 1900s.
The first school on the Westside was called the Costa Mesa School
and was at the intersection of 19th Street and Newport Boulevard. It
taught first through eighth grade. By then, the Newport Harbor Union
High School District existed.
Costa Mesa School was demolished after the ripples from a big 1933
earthquake in Long Beach shook things up in Costa Mesa. A city
already struggling because of the Depression four years earlier now
also faced ruined businesses, including staple economy boosters like
the oil drilling industry and the bank, according to former mayor Bob
Wilson’s book “From Goat Hill to City of the Arts: The History of
Costa Mesa.”
The school was rebuilt and expanded in 1935, said Gladys Refakes,
a volunteer at the Costa Mesa Historical Society, and also gained the
name Main School.
In 1957, the school was renamed yet again after members of the
Board of Trustees voted to tribute retired teacher Clara McNally.
Starting then, Main School was known as the Clara McNally School.
McNally worked at the Main School as a substitute teacher starting
in 1935. She hadn’t taught in a while and had never taught school at
the elementary level, Refakes said.
The teacher was quoted in a 1957 issue of the “Globe Herald” as
saying, “There was a shortage of teachers in the area at that time
and I felt a need to return.”
She was said to patient and compassionate and had a way of
successfully teaching “problem students,” Refakes said.
McNally retired in 1946.
The space that held the school with many names now houses the
Federal Pacific Savings Plaza.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a
historical LOOK BACK? Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at
(949) 646-4170; e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at c/o
Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627
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