A LOOK BACK -- JERRY PERSON
With the holidays behind us and now the beginning of a new year, I
thought we would again look at a typical school day at Dwyer Middle
School. I received quite a favorable response from the column we did last
year, and this week, we’ll travel back to 1932.
On April 26, 1932, a year before the great earthquake would change the
school’s look forever, the school held an open house for parents to see
what their children were doing in class. On hand to welcome the parents
and friends were Supt. C.B. Baldwin, Primary Division Principal Agnes
Smith and Geneva Helbing of the Central Division.
The school’s gymnasium and pool had recently been completed, and the
school was very proud to explain and show its beautiful tile-worked pool
and its many side rooms for basketball, etc. We’ll begin our classroom
tours just like those parents did so long ago by visiting the
kindergarten class, where the little ones were painting pictures that
only a proud parent could enjoy.
As student guides led the party through the room, a young girl was
seen taking the school’s doll for a ride around the room in a wagon. The
parents were next led to Esther Funk’s first-grade class, where her
students showed their parents how they were learning to read and to speak
correctly. To aid her students, Funk used drama as a means of keeping her
students interested. Other first-grade teachers used similar methods.
Miss Jones used flowers, Miss MacMillan had a puppet show, and Miss
Morgan used a beach theme.
In Mrs. Sheehan’s and Miss Dow’s second-grade classes, the concept was
continued. Their mission was to impart to their pupils reasoning,
planning, good judgment and resourcefulness. I know several drivers on
the road who could use some of that.
Miss Miller, the primary division librarian, showed parents how she
helped second-graders pick out books to read. In Miss Sundbye’s and Mrs.
Hadley’s third-grade classes, students were busy learning about numbers
and music. Their students had displays made of seashells, and around the
room were scenes and stories about the people of Japan.
Next, the parents were led into the classrooms of Miss Lockhart and
Miss Greenwald. California history was the topics of their fourth-grade
classes, with soap-carved missions and scenes depicting mission life.
Many of these students had their drawings on display for the parents to
see. Next, our assigned guides brought us to the fifth-grade classes of
Miss Newcombe and Mrs. Scales, where their students displayed scenes of
current events. It would be in this grade that our residents of tomorrow
would learn about art and music appreciation.
Again, our young guides led us around the school and into the
sixth-grade classroom of Miss Hood, where the continent of Africa was
featured. Around the room were depicted the geographical features of
Africa and a comparison between the deserts of Africa and North America.
In another sixth-grade room, students constructed a visual display of
boat-building, from primitive boats carved from a log to that of a modern
ocean liner.
Well I see by the schoolroom clock that it is time for school to let
out, and -- like most of us who went to school -- we couldn’t wait for
that big hand on the clock to reach 12, signaling “school’s out.”
Next week, we’ll finish with our tour guides in a typical day in our
school in 1932.
* 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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