Copyright © 2017 John F. Oyler
July 6, 2017
Bridgeville High
School, Part Two
The Bridgeville Area Historical Society’s “Second Tuesday”
workshop for June continued the review of the early years of Bridgeville High
School, covering the period between 1917 and 1925.
The facilitator began the program by reviewing where we left
off at the end of the first workshop. At that point the high school was housed
on the third floor of Washington School. The student body consisted of about
thirty students in three grades, taught by Principal T. S. McAnlis, Joseph
Ferree, and Romaine Russell.
In 1917 a decision was made to offer a fourth year of high
school; consequently there was no graduating class that year. A newspaper
clipping from that year reports that the
BHS basketball team, in its second season, had been defeated by Morganza
Training School, 37 to 15. One wonders if BHS had its own home floor in those
days, and if so where it was located. Lawrence Rankin played center for the
team.
The Dramatic Club performed a play, “A Kentucky Belle” that
year. Included in the cast were Marian Freed, Walter Jones, Clark Carlisle, and
C. P. Mayer. Jr.
During the previous workshop the facilitator had mentioned
that one of the members of the Class of 1914, Ralph Picard, had been killed in
“the Flannery Explosion”. Since that meeting we were able to locate a newspaper
clipping that reported that incident in great detail.
On April 2, 1918, a large oil tank exploded in the Flannery
Bolt Company’s machine shop, igniting a fire that ultimately killed six
persons, including eighteen year old Ralph Picard and seriously injured six
others. Picard was working with his father, Michael, when the explosion
occurred and was severely burned. His father extinguished the flames, carried
his son outside, and returned to rescue several other persons. Unfortunately
Ralph died in Mercy Hospital the next day.
The BHS Class of 1918 held Commencement exercises in
“Russell’s hall” on May 24; the featured speaker was Dr. Reed Teitrick, a minor
official in the State Department of Education. Russell’s hall was the
auditorium in Squire Frank Russell’s building on Station Street, that was also
the venue for Nickelodeon films. Included in the Class of 1918 was Walter
Jones, who married Clara Weise, a member of the Class of 1916.
The high school faculty changed that summer. Professor W. M
Edwards became Principal and was assisted by Joseph Ferree, Miss Nina Morrison,
and Miss Ella Snodgrass. Sixteen other teachers were assigned to the eight elementary
grades.
There were seven graduates in the Class of 1919, including
Orpha McGarvey who went on to a long, productive career as a teacher in South
Fayette. By 1919 the graduating class had grown to thirteen students, including
Gladys and Lester Allen, Walter Patton, and Elnora Weise. The facilitator
showed a photograph of the class, proudly displaying a BHS pennant.
By 1921 BHS had fielded a girls’ basketball team. A
newspaper clipping reporting their loss to the Canonsburg Juniors, 8 to 7, was
shown. The Class of 1921 had only four members. One of them, Burke Jones, was a
fine soccer player who went on to play for the U. S. Olympic soccer team in
1924, the only BHS graduate to be an Olympian. Another, Helen Bowman, had a
long career as teacher and Principal in the Bridgeville Elementary School.
In the Fall of 1921 BHS fielded its first football team,
which won three of nine games. The Class of 1922 was social, as well as
athletic. On April 21, 1922 they hosted their “Annual Hop” in the American
Legion Pavilion, with Nosskoff’s first orchestra providing the music. What a
shame we have no record of their playlist!
The class of 1922 was the biggest to date, with eighteen
members. Included were C. P. Mayer, Jr., Walter McMillen, Paul Rankin, Harry
Saperstein, and Karl Weise – a roll call of prominent Bridgeville citizens two
decades later.
The gridders struggled the next football season, with only
one win (Morris Township) and four losses. Perhaps the problem was manpower, as
the Class of 1923 graduated only eight students.
The summer of 1923 produced another faculty shakeup. John C.
Bedillon was selected as Supervising Principal, with Eugene W. Davis serving as
High School Principal. Other High School teachers were D. P. F. Lowry
(Science), Frank E. Weidenham (Foreign Languages and
Coach), Walter Sterrett (History), Lucile Martin (English), and Olive Martin (Mathematics).
Coach), Walter Sterrett (History), Lucile Martin (English), and Olive Martin (Mathematics).
The elementary school teachers this year included many who
would still be active fifteen years later when the oldest of the workshop
members were included in their classes – Helen Bowman, Mary Danley, Mary Jones,
Margaret Cronin, and Grace Conger.
This year there were seven hundred students in the
Elementary School and one hundred eighty more in the high school. The basement
was being outfitted with seats to form temporary classrooms for the overflow.
The general sentiment was that a new building was needed. Another initiative
was the establishment of seventh and eighth grades as Junior High, to make the
transition to ninth grade easier.
The football team got off to a good start, “walloping” Cecil
12 to 0. Wins over Canonsburg and Bethel Vocational gave them a three and six
record. The clipping for the Cecil game singled out Chamberdon, Shane, Abraham,
and Simpson as particularly effective players. The soccer team was more
successful, completing their second straight undefeated season and being named
the champions of Allegheny County.
The School Board was reorganized on December 15, 1923, with
Dr. S. C. McGarvey as President and D. M. Bennett as Vice President. They
promptly announced plans to consider acquiring property and building a High
School. By January 31, 1924, the decision to finance this venture with $135,000
worth of bonds had been made.
Bridgeville High School had begun to excel in non-athletic pursuits
as well. The High School Debating team participated in a national competition
at the Carnegie Institute Lecture Hall. Ruth Bowman was one of eighteen
Allegheny County orators competing with speeches on the topic “The Constitution
of the United States”. Georgianna Taylor
won second prize in a W. C. T. U. essay contest; her subject was “The Evils of
Tobacco”.
Commencement for the twenty two students in the Class of
1924 was held at the Bethany Presbyterian Church on May 2, 1924. Ruth Bowman
and Amelia Morgan presented the orations. Also included in the class were
Campbell David, Clarence McMillen, and Oscar Saperstein.
The Dramatic Club was active into the summer. On June 14,
1924, they presented a play based on Booth Tarkington’s novel “Seventeen” at
the Bethany Presbyterian Church. The budding Thespians included Mike Abraham,
Ralph Weise, John Capozzoli, Kenneth McMillen, and Oscar Saperstein.
Five young ladies from the Class of 1924 went off to college
in the Fall – Amelia Morgan (Beaver College), Margaret Koch (Sweet Briar
College), Anna Patterson (Indiana Normal School), Patricia Callaghan (Seton
Hill College), and Ruth Bowman (Muskingum College).
Fall brought BHS’ first successful football season, with
losses to MeKees Rocks and Trinity the only blotches on a seven and two record
under the tutelage of Coach Agnew. A 16 to 0 win over Carnegie caused so much
excitement that one hundred students staged an impromptu snake dance down
Washington Avenue, “upsetting a fruit stand and causing general excitement”.
The Junior Prom was held on January 2, 1925, in the American
Legion Hall. Billie Hollin’s Blue Ridge Orchestra provided was on the
bandstand.
The Class of 1925 had twenty five graduates, including Mike
Abraham, John Capozzoli, George Chappell, Harold Hickman, Cecelia Lutz,
Margaret MacKown, and Robert Petrick. It also included Aldo “Buff” Donelli who
achieved fame in later years as an outstanding soccer player and football
coach. He is the only man ever to coach a Division One college team (Duquesne)
and an NFL team (the Steelers) concurrently, in 1941.
The second BHS history workshop came to a close with the
discussion of the Class of 1925. The next workshop will be at the History Center
at 7:00 pm on Tuesday, July 11, 2017. The Class of 1926 was the first one to
publish a Yearbook; consequently it provides an excellent opportunity for us to
examine life in the new high school building in great detail. That will
probably be the extent of the third workshop.
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