Glenn O. Thompson
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Don Cantrell
Glenn O. Thompson was many things to many people before he died of
cancer in August of 1995.
But the old sports fans of the harbor area remember him best as an
exceptional All-Sunset League quarterback in 1937. It marked the Newport
Harbor High debut into the Sunset League and away from the old Orange
League.
The Tars shocked and defeated champion Excelsior, but a league tie and
a loss knocked them out of the title race.
Coach Ralph K. Reed said, “Thompson was by far the best signal caller
in the conference and the best in Harbor’s short history. Smart and
inspiring. We won every game he was in, and he scored on every opponent
and engineered every drive. He was the team’s key punter and passer.”
One of his top skills was blocking, and he was voted Most Valuable
Player in the League.
The Sailors got past Garden Grove, 6-0, but were tied by Orange, 6-6,
and fell to Anaheim, 12-0, before finishing out strongly with three
straight victories - besting Long Beach Jordan, 6-0; Excelsior, 19-14;
and Huntington Beach, 7-0.
Five of nine rivals were shut out.
It was Reed’s last varsity football team, and his winningest, as he
turned the reins over to Dick Spaulding.
He was valued in other sports and served as student body president in
1937-38.
Thompson always had a grand sense of humor. The school paper asked for
his New Year’s resolution in 1938. He exclaimed, “Off of women;
especially one.”
He and his two pals from third grade in Costa Mesa, George Lumel and
Rollo McClellan, all made first-team, all-league in 1937. All three were
members of the ’36 Bee grid team, first to ever win a football title at
Harbor High.
His leadership qualities were always in evidence later at Whittier
College and the U.S. Coast Guard, where he eventually became a rear
admiral, and served in numerous areas across the globe.
In time, he also graduated as an aviator and his assignments included
Kodiak, Alaska, San Francisco and Miami.
He once served two tours of duty in Coast Guard headquarters in
Washington, D.C. He retired from duty as Commander, 13th Coast Guard District, headquartered in Seattle.
His father served as director of a small water district on Costa
Mesa’s westside for many years. He remained a director after the district
merged with the newly formed Costa Mesa County Water District.
After military service, the admiral and his wife Jean chose to make
their home in Grass Valley. He is survived by his widow and four
daughters and was placed to rest with appropriate military honors.
Glenn O. Thompson, an honored member of the Daily Pilot’s Sports Hall
of Fame, celebrating the oncoming millennium.
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