A thanks to the teachers
JERRY PERSON
Jack Weide stopped by our office and he mentioned that his wife, the
noted writer and former teacher B.D.L. Weide, was writing again on a
new computer she just received.
This bit of news gives me hope that Billie will again be writing
those wonderful opinion stories in one of our other Southern
California newspapers.
This got me thinking of how once you becomes a teacher, your love
of writing continues well after retirement from school.
With the coming of the 100th anniversary in November of our
Huntington Beach City Elementary School District, it is a good time
to recall how much we owe the teachers who have taught during those
years.
This week we are going to see how our community said thanks to
these respected pillars of classroom society.
We showed our gratitude on Oct. 20, 1930 when our PTA, our Woman’s
Club, our Business Men’s Assn. and the Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce came together to offer them thanks in a gala reception
inside the city auditorium.
There were more than 100 teachers from Huntington Beach elementary
school and high school who attended that gala that night.
More than 300 teachers and their guests listened as PTA President
Mildred Ridenour welcomed everyone to a night of music, dancing and
an evening of entertainment.
In those days the majority of teachers were single women and so
President Ridenour told the audience that the reason it was easy to
get teachers to come to Huntington Beach was that we offer them a
prize for coming.
No, it was not a monetary prize or a new house or car.
Ridenour meant that our town has the best eligible bachelors in
Orange County and we would be willing to give them as a prize to any
teacher who could win one.
And over the years many did win the hearts of our prize bachelors.
Next on the program came a musical interlude provided by Margaret
Colvin on piano, Roy Larson on cello and Harry Robinson on violin.
After this string trio completed its two musical selections, it
was now Willis Osborn’s turn to welcome all on behalf of the Chamber
of Commerce.
This was followed by a welcome by May Jackson from the Woman’s
Club and from Howard Hepburn of the Business Men’s Assn.
All of the teachers present at this gala were asked to stand while
they were introduced by their superintendent of schools, C.B. Baldwin
for the elementary school and M.C. Jones for the high school.
With all the welcomes concluded, it was time for the entertainment
part of the evening.
George Sugars, local oil operator and president of the Rex Oil
company, appeared on stage to perform several magic tricks.
In one he had five people from the audience drink from a wine
bottle, he then took a hammer and smashed the bottle to pieces and
from that bottle magically appeared a sleepy guinea pig.
Sugars performed several more sleight of hand tricks and he did a
mind reading act in which he spelled out the name of a teacher whom
he had never seen before.
Sugars was joined onstage by a member of his board of directors in
the Rex Oil company, John Van Pelt.
These two staunch oilmen then did several comic monologues in
costumes that the teachers greatly enjoyed.
When these two oil millionaires concluded their performance it was
time for ice cream and cake for the teachers and their guests.
A small orchestra was brought in to provide music for dancing for
some of the teachers, while others opted to play several rounds of
cards.
Bridge was popular at the time and it was Mary Canon who won a
prize for the women’s highest bridge score and Jack Incho in the
mens.
For the high 500 score, Arch Dixon and Eleanor Lock easily won
their prizes.
J.S. Bales won the evening’s door prize.
So it was in this small way that our teachers were thanked for
giving so much of themselves to our students in our community and
thereby enriching our residents for that century of teaching.
Thank you, Billie, and to all those teachers who have graced our
classrooms in those 100 years.
* 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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