Racing with Huntington’s dream team
Throughout its rich and glorious history, Huntington Beach High has
produced some fine athletes, and one of the proudest moments in the
school’s sports history occurred in 1922.
During this time, the track team was winning trophies and medals
throughout Orange County.
During an April 1, 1922, track meet of the Orange County high
schools at Orange Union High, Huntington High was able to take home
three cups and 18 medals.
There were teams from Santa Ana, Anaheim, Fullerton, Orange and
Capistrano at the race.
Included on Coach Ray Walker’s dream team were Bud and Milt Nash,
Charles Bickmore, Ross Nichols and the team’s captain, Bill Kerr.
Our track team won the Southern California title in Long Beach on
April 22, 1922, and was ready to go to the state championship in
Stockton. I might add that Coach Walker’s nickname was “Feet,” which
he received while running a race in Long Beach in 1914. Walker had bought himself a pair of spikes that were five sizes too large, but
he succeeded in setting a record despite this handicap.
At the train depot on May 3, 1922, 500 of our townspeople gathered
to see Coach Walker and the team off to Stockton.
R.V. Cooley of the Huntington Beach Auto Beauty Parlor saluted the
team by firing a rocket into the air 15 minutes before the train
pulled out.
At 5 p.m. on Saturday, May 6, word reached our town of the success
of the team.
Walker telephoned to say, “We won the meet,” and the news spread
rapidly throughout the town.
Cooley again fired off one of his aerial bombs to let everyone in
earshot know of the team’s victory.
Our town went wild with excitement, as our team was now the state
champion.
When our team arrived home on May 8, they were met at the train
depot by a large crowd. Each member of the team was carried to a
nearby flatbed truck, and photographs were taken of the champs. They
were marched up and down Main Street in a long procession.
As the team arrived at the school auditorium, another large crowd
met them and gave them a big cheer.
On the school’s auditorium stage sat the schoolboard president,
C.A. Johnson, who congratulated the lads and told them they were the
representatives not only of Huntington Beach but also of Orange
County and the great state of California.
Our chamber of commerce held a great rally that evening inside the
school auditorium. Again, a large crowd of well-wishers packed the
auditorium.
The stage was decorated to look like a home library. On the
library table sat the trophies the team had won -- the $700 bronze
Southern California trophy they had won in Long Beach and the
Spaulding trophy they won as state champions.
The team was seated on stage in a semicircle with Johnson, City
Attorney Lew Blodget, newspaper editor James Conrad, chamber of
commerce president W.I. Clapp, Mayor Richard Drew, Coach Walker,
school board member William Newland, Principal M.G. Jones and chamber
of commerce secretary M.A. McCreery.
Mayor Drew got up and joked that he could jump as far as Bud Nash,
but only if he could do it in four sections.
The city attorney told the boys not to be over-confident, but to
stick to the task at hand.
Then the girls’ glee club performed a musical number entitled “The
Gingerbread Man,” with music furnished by the school orchestra, both
under the direction of Francis Douthit.
Kerr assured the audience the team would do its best at the
national championships, to be held in Chicago.
Chamber secretary McCreery, who rode along on the team’s trip to
Stockton, told the story of one team member who was so rattled when
they left Los Angeles in the Pullman car that he pressed the wrong
button to get a drink of water and filled his cup with liquid soap.
It was also mentioned that the Stockton meet was covered in more
than 2,400 daily newspapers and more than 8,000 weekly and semiweekly
publications.
What a proud day for Huntington Beach.
Jones spoke of the value of athletics to the life of the school.
After his speech, he presented the champs with a large cake. This
cake, baked and hand-decorated by John Eader, was inscribed with the
words, “California Champions 1922,” and included a design of the cup
won by the team.
Next week, we’ll see what preparations our town made to send the
team to the national championships in the Windy City and of the
trials, successes, and heartbreaks the team faced there.
* 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.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.