Passing the torch

Portland’s current mayor, Ted Wheeler, poses with our former principal. During senior year, Ted served as class president and I as class historian, so I guess we both ran true to form!

I recently attended a gala celebrating the 150th anniversary of my high school in Portland, Oregon. When I was a student there, and even at its 125th anniversary, Lincoln was billed as the oldest public high school west of the Mississippi. However, it turns out that Lowell High School in San Francisco (presumed to be private because it’s open to only a few select students, like Boston Latin) was actually the first. Curiously enough, both schools use the colors red and white; they share the cardinal as mascot. This coincidence is even stranger when one considers that zero cardinals live on the West Coast!

But I digress. You’re probably wondering, “Why is she writing about her high school, anyway? What does that have to do with family history?” In this case, there are a lot of family connections. For instance, I spent most of the evening with a friend whose two older siblings and young adult son were all there as former students, and her aunt also served as Lincoln’s principal from 1989 to 1992.

…Grampy had also attended Lincoln, where he met his first wife in math class.

Our own principal (looking much the same, four decades later!) was with his wife at the next table; they lived across the street from my grandparents when I was in high school … and Grampy had also attended Lincoln, where he met his first wife in math class. Then I caught a glimpse of Grampy’s brother’s daughter and her husband, who served as Lincoln’s principal between 2000 and 2006.[1]

Some other family connections featured at Lincoln’s 150th anniversary celebration are familiar to many of you readers. The featured speaker was Matt Groening, creator of “The Simpsons” and “Futurama,” and a member of the class of 1972. Matt confirmed that – just like Bart Simpson – he has sisters named Lisa and Maggie, and his mom’s name is Margaret (or Marge, as they’ve redubbed her). He even showed us a picture of his mom with big hair, which he assured us appeared even taller to a small boy looking up from the ground.

He also confirmed that Crusty the Clown, as we all suspected, was based on local cartoon-show host Rusty Nails … played by a man who happened to be a drama coach at Lincoln during Matt’s years. That was something we’d never suspected! Matt also dispelled the belief that Homer Simpson’s evil boss was based on Mr. Bailey, who retired last spring after teaching at Lincoln for fifty years.

Matt was a student at Lincoln when its then-most-celebrated graduate, Mel Blanc, spoke at the school’s centennial celebration.

Matt was a student at Lincoln when its then-most-celebrated graduate, Mel Blanc, spoke at the school’s centennial celebration. According to the voice actor’s biographical sketch on Find-A-Grave, Mel Blanc was Matt’s soul brother. They both terrorized teachers and administrators with their bad-boy antics, but I’m sure “Bugs Bunny” never dreamed he was passing the mantle of cartoon greatness to a young man in the audience when he visited his alma mater in 1969.

I’m lucky to possess my maternal grandfather’s actual high school yearbooks, and even my great-aunt’s diploma from Lincoln, but I’ve been able to make discoveries about other relatives through digital yearbooks and other school ephemera online.

I found out where my great-great-grandfather lived in Boston thanks to the 1855 Chauncy Hall school directory, and I discovered that his mother was one of four boarding students from Nantucket at Boston’s Young Ladies’ High School in 1831. According to the school’s catalog, they offered quite a progressive education for females at that time, teaching Latin (in addition to French, German, Italian, and Spanish), plus Algebra and Geometry, Rhetoric, Astronomy, and Ancient and Modern Geography.

While it’s great fun to see what your relatives looked like in high school or college, don’t stop at the pictures. Be sure to check out whether they were in drama, or ROTC, or on the track team … and take time to check out who else was there with them. I discovered that Agnes and Margaret de Mille (nieces of film director Cecil B. DeMille)* were in the same sorority as my paternal grandmother, thanks to the 1926 UCLA yearbook. And no living soul knew that my paternal grandfather was a classmate of his future son-in-law’s stepfather … until I found them on the same page of Berkeley, California’s University High School yearbook for 1924. My cousins were amazed to know that “Papi” and “Dadoo” had gone to school together! Who knows what discoveries you can make!

At leftFolger Athearn (top) and my cousins’ grandfather, Ed Ewer (bottom), were classmates at University High School in Berkeley, California.

* The William C. de Mille and Cecil B. DeMille branches spelled their surname differently.

Note

[1] Believe it or not, there are actually quite a few high schools in Portland, and even my mother and brother did not attend Lincoln.

 

About Pamela Athearn Filbert

Pamela Athearn Filbert was born in Berkeley, California, but considers herself a “native Oregonian born in exile,” since her maternal great-great-grandparents arrived via the Oregon Trail, and she herself moved to Oregon well before her second birthday. She met her husband (an actual native Oregonian whose parents lived two blocks from hers in Berkeley) in London, England. She holds a B.A. from the University of Oregon, and has worked as a newsletter and book editor in New York City and Salem, Oregon; she was most recently the college and career program coordinator at her local high school.

7 thoughts on “Passing the torch

  1. Pamela, University High School (from which my father graduated in 1934) was actually in Oakland, not Berkeley – despite the fact that it was i part the creation of UC! From Wikipedia:
    University High School was a public high school serving the northwestern portion of Oakland, California. It originally opened in 1923 at what was 5714 Grove Street. Due to the proximity of the campus to the City of Berkeley, “UNI” gained the reputation of the “feeder” high school of Oakland of students directly to the University of California. The high school was closed following World War II in 1948.

    1. Thanks for letting me know. Looks like Papi and Ed Ewer would have been at University High in its first year, then, because the yearbook I found their pictures in was dated 1924. I well understand that whole Oakland/Berkeley confluence thing! When I was in college in Washington, there was a young lady who lived exactly in back of my father and stepmother. Her address was in Berkeley and my family’s was in Oakland. Both households were just a few blocks from the house that Papi grew up in, which is in Berkeley.

      1. When I was a small kid, we lived on Alvarado Road (off Tunnel) in Berkeley; a small part of our property was in Oakland, and the bulk Berkeley — hard to understand when you’re small!

  2. My four siblings were all ten to eighteen years older than I, and they all went to Woodward High School in Toledo, Ohio. By high-school age, I was in a different district. Looking through their yearbooks, I discovered that one sister was voted “the most popular,” and another sister was voted “the prettiest.” One of their classmates was Amos Jacobs, who went to Hollywood and became Danny Thomas. On occasion he would come back to Toledo and do a free night-club act for his old friends and others. Another of his classmates was Saul Soldinger (who later became my brother-in-law); Saul was part of a singing duo on WSPD radio in Toledo. The female half was a young charmer named Helen O’Connell who, as everybody knows, went on to fame with the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra and will forever be remembered for “Green Eyes,” “Tangerine,” and several other numbers. Isn’t it astonishing how many of us have gone to school with someone who turned out to be famous? An illustration of “six degrees of separation” or “everything is connected to everything else.”

    1. Thanks for sharing your family’s high school memories and associations…though I’m sorry to burst your bubble by letting you know that I had never heard of Helen O’Connell. Perhaps you’ll feel a little better if I tell you that the young man who helped convey my mother-in-law’s new “Doris Day” rose to the car at her local nursery had never heard of the actress for whom it was named. I have certainly heard of Jimmy Dorsey, though!

  3. I enjoy reading your articles and am amazed how our lives intersect. My mother worked at Lincoln High School, retiring before the former principal you mentioned began as principal. My nephews recently graduated from there. I have found yearbooks online and found they fill in the blanks for several ancestors.

  4. Pamela, Hi! I’m only just catching up on my genealogy stuff, working my way back.

    You mention Boston’s Young Ladies High School in 1831 and being able to identify a female ancestress. There’s a school directory? Where did you find it? I am trying to identify a young woman, supposedly from CT, who went there (as several references go “she went to a ladies school in Boston”) either about the same time or a little earlier. Her name is Charlotte Wallis Tucker (b. abt 1809). Can you please direct me where to look. Thanks in advance.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.