The last classes at Central Elementary
- Share via
JERRY PERSON
This week, we’ll look back at the old Central Elementary School when
it was still on Orange Avenue between 5th and 6th Streets. We’re
going to look at the activities and subjects being taught in the last
classes of the old school building, in February 1923, well before it
became Dwyer Middle School.
By October of that year, students would attend the new Central
Elementary School at 14th Street and Palm Avenue, but for now we will
approach as quietly as possible see what our kids were learning then.
“Take a Hike” had a different meaning to the kindergarten class,
as these young students hiked over to some local eucalyptus and pine
trees to learn about them, and were even given some leaves and
pinecones to bring home to mother.
As we approach the classroom of Miss Graves, we see her busy
helping students make valentines for the coming holiday and preparing
for a Valentine party.
We’ll tiptoe out, so as not to disturb the class and into Miss
Baldridge’s class, and the first thing we notice is its size -- there
were 48 students.
Sewing and handcrafts were an important part of the student
program in Miss Reith’s class, and for part of that semester her
class would be outside growing plants in the school’s garden.
Knowing how to spell correctly was the responsibility of Miss
Helm, who was preparing her class for the Red Star Contest. Getting a
red star beside your name really meant something to a child, and in
Mrs. Christainer’s classroom, her second-graders were learning to
read with expression and absolute accuracy.
I can’t say the same for today’s politicians and television
newscasters.
In Mrs. Biery’s class, her students were given the assignment of
reading the literary classics, writing a small summary of what they
read. The students were also to list the characters in the book they
read and to explain in a sentence what the moral of the story was.
In Mrs. McKelvey’s classroom, her students were determined to
learn all about Abraham Lincoln and to share what they learned in
short talks in front of the class each morning. The students in
McKelvey’s room were great readers, having read through four school
readers in seven weeks, and were to begin reading a fifth, a Horace
Mann reader.
In the sixth-grade class, students had just completed writing,
from memory, the 23rd Psalm, something you don’t see in our public
schools today.
With the coming of Valentine’s Day, there was a beehive of
activity in both Mrs. Adams’ and Mrs. Howard’s classrooms, as their
students were busy making valentine boxes and valentines to fill
them.
Third-grade teacher Ina Blossom was especially busy this month,
teaching her class and entertaining visitors from Arizona.
In Mr. Park’s science class, each of three groups was given a
subject to report to the entire class. One was to report on “New and
Useful Inventions,” another on “Labor Saving Machines,” and the third
on “Household Helps.”
Being able to read one’s handwriting has always been an asset in
the business world, and Lola Reed served as supervisor of penmanship.
Mr. de Laubenfels has been busy coaching boys in the seventh and
eighth grades in the finer points of that grand old American game of
baseball, and when spring comes, he is sure that they will be fine
players.
A new teacher was added to this year’s faculty when Muriel Curtis
from Smith College was hired to teach fourth grade, and she will also
be teaching girls’ physical education.
Harlen Reid’s arithmetic class, meanwhile, was learning to use
numbers.
We should be very proud of these teachers at Central Elementary,
for not only were they the last teachers to teach at the old wooden
two-story school, but they also taught good morals and ethics that
would remain with them for the rest of their lives.
Because of these dedicated teachers then and now, Huntington Beach
is a better place to be.
* 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.