Yesterday’s heroes of the chalkboard
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JERRY PERSON
As the small beach resort community of Pacific City grew in
population at the turn of the last century, the community leaders
needed a school in
town so that their children would receive the best possible
education, and not have to travel so far away.
The city founded the first permanent school in the upper floor
above Walter Schmidt’s grocery store in the 100 block of Main Street.
The townsfolk hired its first regular elementary school teacher,
Clara Christensen, and in this room Christensen taught kindergarten
to eighth-graders.
It was a makeshift classroom. The seats were on runners so that
they could be moved out of the way when the room was being used for
dances and other social events.
Christensen would later marry a man named Boyer and would reside
for years in Garden Grove where she lived to be 80 years old.
In the last couple of weeks we have been looking atsome of our
teachers who have educated our many children in the 1950s at our high
school.
We will again be looking at the lives of these great individuals
before arriving at Huntington High School.
It was on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies that Stuart
Mepham
was born of Canadian parents, and it was there that he attended
grammar
school.
When Mapham was in the sixth grade, he and his family were
captured by the occupying Japanese forces during World War II and
taken to a
concentration camp in Sumatra, where they spent the next three and
a half years.
After their release from the camp the Mapham family moved to
Vancouver, Canada, where Mapham entered high school and also had to
learn to speakEnglish.
In 1947 Mapham moved to San Francisco to attend Samuel Gompers
Trade School before spending three years at Stanford University.
San Francisco State was where Mapham received his master’s degree
in physical science.
Before coming to Huntington High he joined the faculty at Mission
High
School in San Francisco as a science teacher.
Knowing just what chemicals to mix so as not to blow oneself up
was the
responsibility of Clarence Mason, who came to Huntington High from
Seima, Calif.
It was in that town that he received his early education before
coming to Chapman College. He later received his master’s degree from
USC.
In 1937, he joined the faculty at Dinube High School and remained
there for 10 years before coming to Huntington High with his wife
Harriet and son Edwin. They lived on Crest Avenue in Huntington
Beach.
It was the lure of its warm weather and beautiful flowers that
brought Margaret McWethy to California from her hometown in Indiana.
Having receiving her master’s degree at Indiana State Teachers
College McWethy began her teaching career both in her hometown of
Clinton, Ind. and in Chicago, where she taught English.
When she was not teaching at Huntington, she could be found
working in her garden, where McWethy and her husband, Cecil, lived at
their home on 11th Street in Huntington Beach.
Teaching sophomore English was Gerald Pomeroy’s specialty. He came
from Oregon to attend USC.
Pomeroy served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and in Korea
for
seven years. After retiring from the military, Pomeroy taught
English
in Long Beach before joining the faculty at Huntington.
Knowing how our country began and how its history evolved was the
responsibility of Betty Reider.
She received her early education at Central High School in
Parkersburg,
W. Va. and at Kent State in Ohio.
After she received her master’s degrees from Western University in
Cleveland, Reider served in the U.S. Navy as a WAVE officer and was
stationed in San Diego.
Before teaching at Huntington she taught history in Fullerton and
she
lived on California Street.
When not teaching machine shop at Huntington, Raymond Royes, his
wife Beverly, and sons Gary and Ronald would be enjoying their desert
cabin in the Morongo Valley.
Royes graduated from Torrance high school and from El Camino
College
before attending UC Santa Barbara and Cal State Long Beach.
For several years, Royes was a journeyman machinist before coming
to
Huntington to impart his knowledge of machine shop workings to his
students.
Our last hero of the teaching profession is Marion Wallace and had
an
amazing educational background, where she graduated from
Bloomfield, N.J. High School, and received her master’s at the
prestigious Radcliff College.
She taught economics at . the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, she was dean at Franklin College in Massachusetts.
Wallace had been principal of Wheelock College in Boston and
professor of English at Massachusetts State Teachers College before
joining her fellow faculty at Huntington.
For many years she owned and operated a children’s camp.
Wallace and her husband, Earle, were the proud parents of two
daughters, Janet and Harriet.
There are so many more teachers that we have not touched upon in
these three short weeks, but one day I hope to bring their rich
personal
history to our readers.
So as today’s teachers leave their classrooms for the summer
vacation I
hope as they walk along the hallowed halls of Huntington High that
they
take a moment to reflect on their predecessors who
also walked those same hallowed halls and give them a silent
thanks. The should also say thanks to Huntington Beach’s first
teacher, Clara Christensen, who began our long line of heroes of the
chalkboard.
* 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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