The Web site
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Roger Carlson
Many of the treasures of Heritage Hall at Newport Harbor High once
lie strewn in a Dempsey Dumpster, but the Sailors’ original coach and
athletic director, Ralph Reed, rescued the material, stowed it in his
garage and hoped for better days to come.
It was in the ‘70s that Daily Pilot Sports viewed Reed’s
treasures, stacked from floor to ceiling in his garage, packed away
like so many bales of cotton, and he told of his treasures and the
need to hold on to the past.
By 1980 when the Sailors had their school’s 50th anniversary,
Fabian Giroux came to the forefront and began “Little Heritage Hall,”
featuring Coach Reed’s teams, and a couple of years later a math
teacher, the department head, Webster Jones, emerged and began taking
inventory for Giroux.
“One day (in 1984) Mr. Giroux was showing the place to some
people,” said Jones. Jack Koll (a former Newport Harbor student) was
there and he noticed some sketches and asked, “What are these? Plans?
Jack Koll picked up on the idea and went to his dad, Don Koll, of
building reputation, and in a very short time, a check for $25,000
was presented.
Walkie Ray did the contracting and Rolly Pulaski designed Heritage
Hall.
“We thought it might take $25,000,” said Web Jones, “ but the
costs came to $50,000.
“Our alumni association raised $10-12,000, and the (school)
district paid for the rest of it.”
Heritage Hall became two rooms with a small work office in between
which preserves the rich history of the school through photos and
memorabilia.
“It’s the jewel of Newport Harbor High School,” said Jones.
Also very significant was the presence of Betty and Charlie
Beecher, who pulled in a lot of other alumni.
“If it hadn’t been for the Beechers,” mused Jones.
Another figure who deserves note, custodian Orville Lloyd, who
saved various original tables and chairs, furniture which was
otherwise doomed.
The hall is used to accommodate alumni at reunions and is a place
for special meetings.
The alumni association has grown to 1,100 graduates.
The Beechers have passed on, but their legacy, too, continues.
Web Jones, a teacher at Newport Harbor for 32 years, has ensured
the future with assistants Chet Malek and Diane Jones.
Presently they are trying to cope with plans which apparently will
bring in a conference room within Heritage Hall in the near future,
which will give the Hall an opportunity to expand in terms of usage
with the walls adorned with some of the more notable plaques and so
forth, while other treasures will be displayed more compactly.
Jones is seeking the high road on the possible space shrinkage,
looking for ways which will improve the anticipated changes. Others
would be happy with the status quo.
As for the future, most likely in some corner at some point in
time, it would seem there will be another honored Sailor, that of Web
Jones, whose travels began as a senior at Evanston High in Illinois,
the U.S. Navy, a year at John Middlebury College in Vermont, a year
at Stanford to obtain his master’s and a year at Lower Lake Union
High, near Clear Lake, which he still recalls as “The end of the
world.”
“I had three students in advanced math and nine in physics,” said
Jones. “One of my students asked, ‘Mr. Jones, what are you doing
here?’ ”
What he was doing was waiting for a call -- and it came from
Newport Harbor Principal Sidney Davidson in 1949.
For the next 33 years he was Newport Harbor’s math department,
from a staff of three to a staff of 18 in the late ‘70s, almost all
of that time as the head of the department.
A Costa Mesa resident since 1950, Web and wife Eunice are the
proud parents of four successful Newport Harbor graduates -- Tim (in
communications), Larry (an electrician), Tom (an engineer) and Joyce
(a public health nurse).
Perks include two granddaughters.
Web Jones retired in 1982, and for the past two decades has been
the hall’s congenial historian and gatekeeper.
Perhaps they’ll call his corner “The Web site.”
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