High school faculty of the 1930s
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A LOOK BACK
No matter how old we become, or where we were raised, we never can
forget those years we spent in school and the people who helped us
through them.
They were the teachers who stood at the head of the classroom who
taught us how to live in the grown-up world outside of the safety of
the classroom. There was the school staff who kept track of our lives
and maybe even gave you a talking to in the principal’s office that
you may have deserved.
Last week we looked at a few of these dedicated people who made up
the staff and faculty at Central Elementary School, which today is
known as Dwyer Middle School.
This week, we’ll walk down the halls of the high school as we
briefly look at the staff and faculty of Huntington Beach High School
of the 1930s. I hope it will bring back a few more happy memories.
Since joining the school as principal in 1919, M.G. Jones was a
familiar face on campus for many of you. He received his training at
the University of Michigan and from prestigious Columbia University.
Jones continued as principal until 1945 when he retired.
Helping the principal with all the paperwork was the duty of the
vice principal. This duty fell on the shoulders of Ray Elliott. He
joined the school faculty in 1923 to serve as a math and history
teacher until 1929 when he was appointed the school’s vice principal.
When Jones retired Elliott became the school’s principal. Elliott
received his education from Pomona College and from USC.
If you had been absent from school and returned to face the office
staff with a note from Mom, you would have seen one of the office’s
secretaries. Ruth Smith was the school’s business secretary who
joined the school in 1930 after attending the University of Maine.
Also in the office was Julia Payne, who came to Huntington High in
1917 after graduating from Hastings College in Nebraska. Also sitting
at her desk in the office was Marion Sherman from Fullerton.
Harry “Cap” Sheue was making a name for the school in the ‘30s.
Another name that is almost as familiar as his, is that of Alvin
Reboin, the school’s head football coach. Reboin joined the school in
1937 after receiving his degree from USC. He also taught the students
typing and citizenship. Teaching physical education to the girls was
Velma Morrell and Ada Bowers. In 1928 Morrell came to Huntington
after graduating from Pomona College and Bowers joined the faculty in
1935 after her graduation from USC.
In think one of the hardest subjects to teach boys is English. And
judging from some boys you hear talking on Main Street today, it
still is. This subject was taught by Margaret Bliss, a graduate of
the University of Minnesota who started here in 1927 and Phyliss Jamison who came here in 1924 from South Dakota State College to
teach us how to congregate a verb.
Social problems were the specialty of Clive Adams who also taught
civics and U.S. history. He was educated at USC and came to the
school in 1936. Lloyd Hamren was the teacher Huntington Beach
resident Gordie Higgins remembers most. Hamren came here in 1924
after getting his training from the University of Utah.
Teaching physics and chemistry was the realm of William Frazer and
he must have done a good job since his class didn’t blow up the
school. Frazer started here in 1930 after graduating from the
University of Washington.
In the way of shop teachers, two stand out the most. The shop with
its smell of fresh cut wood was the domain of Dale Braybrooks and he
started teaching how to make beautiful pieces in wood in 1923 after
coming from Michigan’s Western State Teachers College. And what boy
would forget his auto shop instructor, especially Byrl Harper. He
showed the students the inner workings of Mr. Ford’s Model T and
those straight eight engines too. He also taught advanced algebra, a
subject I don’t want to recall today.
A name that has popped up in several Look Back columns is that of
Ruth Harlow. She came from the College of the Pacific to begin her
long teaching career in voice and glee club in 1922. But teachers
were not the only adults to be found on campus. There were the bus
drivers that picked you up in the rain and mud and delivered you
safely back home and you can thank Charles Walton, O.O. Troop, Walter
Griffin, Havden Gardner and Verne Breeding many times over.
Keeping you warm in the classroom in winter was the duty of R.M.
Robb, the school’s engineer. Keeping the school ship-shape and clean
was the responsibility of the school’s janitors Ribel, J.E. McManus,
M.L. Russell and William Tretheway and they were under head custodian
H.A. Gallienne. Keeping the grounds looking nice was the job of R.C.
Huff. There are, of course, many more wonderful people who worked for
the high school in the 1930s that we could bring to mind. To some of
you these names may only be names printed in black ink, but to those
who attended the school at the time and remember and cherish those
memories, these people were their important heroes who, for them, sat
on the shoulders of giants.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington
Beach resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at
P.O. Box 7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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