Why did Northeast High School move in 1957?
Transcription
Why did Northeast High School move in 1957?
Why did Northeast High School move from 8th and Lehigh Aves. to Cottman and Algon Aves. and become coeducational in 1957? A Service Learning Project 2001-2002 of Class 161 Northeast High School Cottman and Algon Aves. Philadelphia, PA 19111 www.nehs.phila.k12.pa.us 1 Researchers / Authors: Kristin Arthurs Philip Capanna Cortney Catallo Antonio Cobette Russell Eck Tommy Golphin Wil Green Christine Griffis Michael Ivers Elizabeth Jean Steven Jennings Shanae Johnson Katie Keichline Krista Ketter Mohammad Lami Evan Lessa Michelle Longenecker Casey Maron Patricia McGonagle Vidal Melendez Greg Messer Jennifer Miller Oksana Padus Janki Patel Damian Pawlikowski Jobby Philip Michael Sanchez Joseph Stalmaster Jillian Stoerrle Agnieszka Szymula Jason Troy Instructor: Donna Sharer Special Thanks to: Disney Learning Partnership for a grant to buy equipment, software and publish the project Temple University Urban Archives – Ms. Margaret Jerrido, Archivist & Head of the Urban Archives Evan Towle, Assistant Archivist Northeast High School librarian, Mr. Michael Bell Northeast High School Alumni Association Alumni from Northeast High School and Edison High School who were interviewed for the project: Dave Carr David Nucklow Ronald Colston Leonard Pakman Jim Eagen Jr. Joseph Rosskowski Ira Feldman John Smith Harry Gilbert Anthony Stagliano Al Goodyear Millard Wilkinson Donald Hackney Gerald Mayall Frank Mertens Thomas Mulvihill Chester Nieckoski 2 Index Hypotheses………………………………………………………..5 Our research included………………………………………….5 What we learned Northeast High School’s Proud History………………..7 School of Stars………………………………………………12 Northeast Provided Many Extra Curricular Opportunities for its Students…………………….16 Summary of Our Evidence on Why the School Moved And Became Co-Educational in 1957………………….20 Conclusions………………………………………………………26 What We Would Like to Find Out…………………………..31 Future Steps…………………………………………………….33 Interviews with Northeast and Edison High School Alumni Dave Carr..................................................................35 Ronald Colston…………………………………………….….36 Jim Eagen Jr…………………………………………….…….37 Ira Feldman…………………………………………….………37 Harry Gilbert………………………………………….……….37 Al Goodyear………………………………………….…………38 Donald Hackney…………………………………..…………..39 Gerald Mayall…………………………………….…………….41 Frank Mertens………………………………….………………42 Thomas Mulvihill………………………………………….…..43 Chester Nieckoski……………………………………….…….43 Leonard Packman…………………………………….……….44 Joseph Rosskowski……………………………………….…..45 David Nucklow………………………………………….………45 John Smith…………………………………………………......46 Tony Stagliano…………………………………………….…...47 Millard Wilkinson……………………………………….……..48 3 Cottman and Algon neighborhood before the 1940s. 8th and Lehigh Aves. in the first half of the 20th century. 4 Hypotheses In October 2001, we began a Service Learning Project to try to determine why Northeast High School was moved and became co-educational in 1957. In the process, we learned of Northeast’s proud history, traditions, and important and successful alumni. We developed three hypotheses for why the school moved and became co-educational: ----The neighborhood at 8th and Lehigh Aves. was changing racially, economically and socially. The Alumni Association requested the move to get out of a “changing” neighborhood. The Northeast Alumni Association included very successful and influential people. If they wanted the school moved to a new location, the Alumni Association was able to influence members of the Philadelphia School Board. ----The northeast section of the city was undergoing a rapid population increase and was in need of a new school. The School Board was not going to build two schools (female / male) and therefore it would be coeducational. Since the school was called “Northeast,” it should be in the northeast section of the city. ----The building at 8th and Lehigh had no adjacent athletic fields. Students traveled to 29th and Clearfield Aves. Northeast had a strong athletic reputation and therefore needed a building with adjacent athletic fields. The building at 8th and Lehigh Ave. was built in 1905 and therefore by the 1950s was “old.” Our research included: --oral history: We interviewed alumni from the 1950s and two men who went to the 8th and Lehigh location when it became “Edison High School.” We learned about the reputation of Northeast High School, school life in the 1950s and ideas on why the school moved. --Temple University’s Urban Archives: With the help of the Urban Archive’s archivist, Margaret Jerrido, and assistant archivists Evan Towle, we found articles from the Philadelphia Bulletin, saw old Philadelphia maps and photos of both neighborhoods and looked through the Archive’s files to find information on why the school moved and reactions to moving the school. We also found information on crime and efforts to combat crime in North Philadelphia. --With the help of Mr. Bell, Northeast High School’s librarian, we looked through old issues of the Megaphone (school newspaper) from the 1950s and yearbooks from 1947 – 1961. These resources gave us information 5 on school activities, accomplishments, demographics, students government and sports. There was NO information in either the Megaphone or yearbook about moving the school. The first mention of moving the school in the Megaphone is after the school moved on February 11, 1957. --U.S. census data from 1940, 1950 and 1960: We looked through census data for neighborhoods (3 each) surrounding 8th and Lehigh and Cottman and Algon. We focused on population (demographics), housing (owner occupied, home value, monthly rent), and income/education for the city of Philadelphia, the 8th and Lehigh neighborhood and the Cottman and Algon neighborhoods. The census data gave us information on the economic and racial changes at 8th and Lehigh Aves. --School Board of Philadelphia minutes: We looked through School Board minutes from the 1950s while at the Urban Archives. We found the resolution to move the school. There was no information on the decision making process. Once the School Board minutes are bound, only resolutions of decisions, financial data and position assignments are included. It is important to note Philadelphia’s School Board was not under “home rule” until 1965. When the decision was made in 1953 to move the school, the School Board was under Philadelphia County Courts. --We looked at a 1960-1961 report on Northeast High School, “Intergroup Education Northeast High School (Action-Research Seminar Report)” which gave information on the school’s demographics. We also looked at Archive 75, a book published on the 75th anniversary (1965) of Northeast High School. The book DOES NOT mention the decision to move the school until after the school was moved in 1957. 6 What we learned Northeast High School’s Proud History Timeline 1889 – 1957 Compiled by Janki Patel and Jobby Philip 1889 – Issac A. Shepard, President of the Board of Education, decided another training school was needed in Philadelphia. The first school was Central Manual Training School which opened in 1885 To speed the process, he donated $1500 to begin a program for 100 boys at the W.A. Lee School Building on Howard St. and Girard Ave. 1890 – Northeast Manual Training School opened. Students had to pass a written entrance exam. Northeast became the 3rd public high school in the United States 1892 – Northeast became independent of Central. Northeast’s first principal, Dr. C. Hanford Henderson, taught chemistry and electrical engineering. The school had three classes – junior, intermediate, and senior. Students took academic and industrial (shop) classes. Northeast established its own publication, The Archive, separate from Central. 1894 – First meeting of the Alumni Association. 1898 – Isaac C. Sheppard died; he left funds for gold and silver medals to be awarded to the “most worthy graduates” of Central and Northeast Manual Training Schools. Northeast gained a new principal, Dr. Andrew J. Morrison. 1902 – Northeast opened its first annex at 2nd and Girard Aves. Music, sports and the Alumni Association became integral to the reputation of Northeast. 1905 – Northeast moved to a new building at 8th and Lehigh Aves. The school cost $400,000 to build and furnish. The school was overcrowded so 200 freshmen attended the Howard Street Annex. There was a large, community dedication service sponsored by the Alumni Association on November 17, 1905. Woodrow Wilson, then President of Princeton University, delivered the main address. 7 1906 – The Alumni Assoc. began a major campaign to obtain an athletic field for the school. They approached the School Committee to share land at 29th and Lehigh Aves. to both Central and Northeast. The field, with a fence, grandstand, football, baseball, track, soccer fields and tennis courts, a separate building for dressing and showers was dedicated in 1908. 1909 – Northeast Alumni, students and faculty worked together to improve the athletic fields. It was also the first year Northeast defeated Central in football. 1911 – Northeast became a four year school. Its name was changed to Northeast High School. 1918 – Northeast Alumni served in the First World War; 35 died. Some boys enrolled in the Boys’ Working Reserve. They were excused from school in September and October to work on farms in Bucks County. 1920 – The Alumni Association established an endowed scholarship to the University of Pennsylvania in honor of Dr. Morrison. He was to retire in June but died on June 1. 1922 – Northeast began a school newspaper which as named the Megaphone in its second year. 1923 – Northeast was presented with two stained glass windows honoring Northeasters who served in the First World War. In 1988, the stained glass windows were moved to Edison High School’s new bulding. 8 1924 – Northeast’s Senate started the Senate Award for non-athletic recognition. 1932 – With help from the Works Progress Administration, a new wing was added to the school to ease overcrowding. The W.P.A. also helped increase social activities with Northeast’s sister school, Kensington High School. A W.P.A. orchestra supplied the music. Northeast became known for its celebrity visits. Mr. Charles Yahn had world-famous persons appear at assemblies. Visitors in 1932 included Babe Ruth, John McCormack and Marian Anderson. Albert Einstein visited in 1934. 1935 – Northeast won it first Public League Football Championship. 1937 – A new wing was completed and included four shops and academic classrooms. The original building was renovated and had a new library. 1940s – At least 300 Northeast alumni died in the Second World War. At Northeast, athletic teams were very successful, especially in soccer. Improvements were made in the 1940s to science labs and the auditorium. 1951 – Northeast was chosen a national school of the year. It received the Francis Bellamy Flag Award. (See photo below Photo includes Miss Margarette S. Miller, noted historian and author of “I Plege Allegiance,” and B. David Bellamny, son of Francis Bellamy.) The award honored one U.S. high school “for the citizenship of its students and for the success of its graduates in business, professional and public life.” Northeast was the 10th recipient of the award and the first in Pennsylvania. Northeast’s Megaphone took first place in a press contest. 9 1952 – Northeast seniors won prizes in local art contests. 1953 – Northeast’s Alumni Association asked the Philadelphia School Board to move the school to a new location in Northeast Philadelphia. The School Board approved a site at Cottman and Glendale Aves. Northeast retained possession of the Morrison Trophy for public sports leadership. 1954 – The Executive Committee of the Alumni Association stated they needed a new school because of increased enrollment. The School Board approved a $5,918,000 budget to construct the new building. 1956 – Northeast High School would be co-educational. It was also decided that the students at 8th and Lehigh would not be transferred to the new school. One Board members questioned the costs for athletic fields, $1,000,000, but was overruled. Northeast had one defeat in basketball – a loss to Overbrook High School under the leadership of Wilt “The Stilt” Chamberlain. Northeast football was undefeated and tied with St. James for the City Championships. The Megaphone won a Medalist Award from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. 1957 – The building and grounds at Cottman and Glendale Aves. were dedicated May 1 in program sponsored by the Alumni Assoc. The 8th & Lehigh Ave. building was renamed “Thomas Edison High School.” The Alumni Association approved the move to turn on the Northeast High School Athletic Field (29th and Clearfield Aves.) back to the City of Philadelphia. 10 8th and Lehigh Ave. School Cottman and Algon Aves. School 11 School of Stars List compiled by Krista Ketter Northeast High School was called the “School of Stars.” (Phila. Bulletin, 4/28/57) because “so many of its graduates have advanced from humble homes to places of eminence.” A headline in the November 13, 1940 issue of the Megaphone states “Northeaster May Proudly Boast of Famous Alumni in Many Fields.” The article quotes Mr. C.A. Young, an alumnus, who challenged the notion that Central High School produced more “well-recognized” graduates by listing many accomplished Northeast graduates. Northeast was also know for many successful athletic teams. At the dedication of the school at Cotman and Algon Aves. in 1957, “hundreds of members of the Alumni Association, including leaders in industry, education, banking and law,” attended. (Philadelphia Inquirer, 1/2/57) Mr. Young, the first principal at the Cottman and Algon location, at the dedication ceremony said “Our athletic record is the envy of public high schools….It takes a loyal, championship student body to produce championship teams…Northeast High is a school filled with honor, pride, and tradition…. It is more than a school. It is a way of life…” (Megaphone, May 1, 1957). In the 1950s, the Megaphone listed successful alumni. The following are a few of Northeast’s successful alumni listed in the 1950s: 1950 – Howard D. Graf, a Loan Supervisor for Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Atlanta, GA. 1951 – William L. Ridpath, Jr., a manager of the Solvay Sales Corporation Mr. Joseph Sahne, was elected vice president of Swarthmore College. 1952 – Lester Ferguson, No. 1 singing star on British radio, called “America’s leading ambassador in song.” Dr. Franklin C. Massey, is a well known heart specialist, a member of the Philadelphia country medical society and an editor of a cardiology publication. Mr. William E. Groben, is the Chief Architect of the U.S. Forest Service Dept. of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 12 Mr. Grover C. Ladner, was appointed to the PA State Supreme Court by Gov. Duff 1953 - Mr. Harry J. Foster is a chief court stenographer at Philadelphia City Hall. Dr. Bernard Love received a PhD in chemistry from Columbia University. He researched poison ivy. 1954 - Lt. Col. George Doyle was the Air Force advisor to Secretary of State Dean Acheson at the Japanese Treaty Conference in Washington, D.C. He is a specialist in far eastern regions. Dr. Eugene Markley Landis, is the George Higginson Professor of Physiology at Harvard Medical School and the president of the American Physiology Association. Dr. Samuel Baer, was elected attending physician at the Albert Einstein Medical Center Dr. Allan G. Chester published a book on Hugh Latimer, a preacher during the English Reformation 1955 - Many of Northeast’s teachers are alumni – Mr. Judson L. Folker, ’07, teaches fin and applied arts Mr. Carl Heim, ’27, teaches English Mr. Leonard Silverman, ’25, teaches Science Mr. William C. Tuttle is the Vice President of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania Mr. James Parker was the leading scorer at Cheyney State Teachers College in basketball and the Delaware Valley leading scorer. 1956 – Mr. Charles C. Smith was elected Auditor General of the State of Pennsylvania Meyer Brandschain is a sports writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer 1957 – Clellan Mitchell was elected president of the Savings and Loan Association of Pennsylvania 13 From the June 1956 yearbook: “…the Trophy Case…is the symbol of the greatness of our school.” Another Northeast High School tradition is the Class Pin. Here are samples of 1950s class pins: 14 15 Northeast provided many extra curricular opportunities for its students Data compiled by all students from 1950 – 1957 Megaphone and yearbooks. List written by Russell Eck, Joseph Stalmaster and Phil Capanna. Athletics: Basketball, Football, Baseball, Soccer, Swimming, Track, Cross Country, Fencing, Bowling, Crew, Gymnastics, Tennis, Golf, Table Tennis, Boxing and Ping Pong Teams 1956 Cross Country Squad 1954 – 1955 “Dribblers” included co-captains James “Tee” Parham and William “Sonny” Hill 16 1955 Baseball Team 1955 Bowling Team 1955 Fencing Team 17 Music: Orchestra, Swing Band, Band, Choir, Mastersingers (choral group), Glee Club 1956 Glee Club Clubs: Executive Committee, Tribunal (school court), Library Squad, Locker Squad, Statecraft Squad, Theatrical Electrical Club, Drama Club, German Club, Stamp Club, NE-KHS (Kensington High School) Dance Committee, Cheerleading, Rocket Society, Honor Society, Original HI-Y, Interscholastic Team, Megaphone, Press Photo Club, Leaders Club (to stop hall walking and noise) 1956 Interscholastic League (Presidents, VPs, Senators, Chief Justices, Students Editors of Philadelphia schools) 18 1955 Northeast High School Senate Important Awards / Honors / Championships Bellamy Award – 1951 “NE First School in State to Merit Such Distinction” (Megaphone, 10/11/51) Track team and Bowling Team came out on top (1951) Megaphone took first place in a press content (1951) Tennis Team comes in 2nd to Central (1952) Students won fifth place at Science Fair contest (1953) Northeast had championship football, soccer and bowling teams (1953) Northeast swim team won championship (1953) Public League Basketball – 2nd place (1953) Morrison Trophy (retained possession) (1953) – given for sports leadership top honors Nor Fencing Team was 2nd (1954) Public League Soccer Cup (1954) Championship track teams (1954) City Football Trophy (1954) Two varsity men won individual Fencing crowns (1954) Fencing Team was PA State co-champions (1955) Championship bowling teams (1955) 19 Track Team won city crown, basketball finished second, and Northeast won in tennis (1956) Northeast beat Central at annual Thanksgiving Day game (1956) Undefeated in football; tied with St. James for City Championship (1956) Megaphone won the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Medalist Award (1956) Kristen Arthurs and Krista Ketter searching copies of the Megaphone Summary of our evidence of why the school moved and became coeducational in 1957 In the minutes of the School Board of Philadelphia, PA on March 10, 1953, it states: “From the President of Northeast High School Alumni Association requesting that the name of the new high school located at Teesdale and Algon Avenue be the Northeast High School, and the Faculty, traditions, alumni, endowments, and aspirations of Northeast be transferred to this new school.” The School Board members in 1953 were Mr. FitzPatrick, Miss Golden, Mrs. Lewis, Mr. Loesche (Class of 1905), Mr. McDonough, Mr. Obermayer, Dr. Pollock, Mr. Swenson, Dr. Turner, Mr. Weinrott, 20 Mr. Walter Biddle Saul (President), Mr. Downs, Mr. Greenberg and Dr. Lucchesi. The Philadelphia Bulletin covered the story on March 11, 1953 – “Suggest Moving Northeast High.” According to the article, Frederick C. Flechter, Jr. (’28), president of the NEHS Alumni Association, proposed that the “new school be co-educational and devoted primarily to science and the technology arts.” Mr. Flechter also asked that the “name, traditions, and endowments” of the present school (8th and Lehigh) be transferred to the new one. The other members of the Alumni Association Executive Committee were J. Alfred Covey (’10), H. Birchard Taylor (’01), and Walter J. Schob (’22). By the time the school building at Cottman and Algon Ave. was dedicated, the School Board Vice President was William H. Loesche (Class of 1905). (The Alumni Association of Northeast High School 75th Anniversary Historical Record 1890 – 1965.) Apparently the School Board was planning to build a new school at a “30-acre tract bounded by Algon, Glendale and Summerdale Aves.” “Architectural plans for the $6,000,000 projected structure are being drawn by Gallinger Co.” (Phila. Bulletin, 3/11/53) According to the Bulletin on May 8, 1953, “Northeast High Site Approved,” the School Board authorized the purchase of a 43 acre site for $500,000. In School Board minutes dated September 8, 1953, the Board approved a contract with the Ballinger Company to “perform all architectural and engineering services required for the construction of a new high school building at Cottman and Glendale Aves., the estimated cost of the project to be $5,500,000.” This was the second time the Alumni Association was instrumental in moving Northeast High School. In an interview with Dr. Walter S. Cornell, Class of 1893, the last known survivor in 1965 of the Pioneer Class, “A group of my classmates went to Mayor Samuel H. Ashbridge and said to him: There is a lot of vacant ground up at 8th and Lehigh Ave. which was once condemned to be a reservoir and never used. We would like to have that for a nice new school building to replace the old brick one where we have been holding forth the last eight years. In some way or other they got his interest. They went to Council and passed an ordinance. The lot was given to the Board of Education and the building was constructed.” (The Alumni Association of Northeast High School 75th Anniversary Historical Record 1890 – 1965, page 13). The dedication of the 8th and Lehigh school on November 17, 1905 was sponsored by the Alumni Association. It included a luncheon at Philadelphia’s Union League. The Alumni Association, with the help of Philadelphia’s mayor and president of the Board of Education, helped bring then Princeton University President Woodrow Wilson to deliver the main address. Other speakers included Philadelphia’s Mayor John Weaver. At a Alumni Association banquet on November 18 held at the Majestic Hotel, Broad 21 Street and Girard Ave., the guest of honor was Horace W. Castor of the architectural firm that designed the 8th and Lehigh Ave. school. In the booklet, The Alumni Association of Northeast High School 75th Anniversary Historical Record: 1890 - 1965, (page 33) it states “In 1954 at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Northeast Alumni Association, it was agreed that the increase in students body required a new building…Frank A. Bedford, ’95, a former member of the Board of Education of Philadelphia made an appointment… to confer with Mr. Anderson, business manager of the Board of Education, regarding a new building. In offering the new site, Mr. Anderson made two points, that the next new building was to be on a site at Cottman and Algon Aves. in the Northeast area and that is must be coeducational… The Northeast Alumni Association Executive Committee unanimously accepted the proposed site. The Board of Education made the final decision.” (Note: The date, 1954, is incorrect according to the Board of Education minutes. The Board of Education approved “the move” in March 1953. The decision was also in the Philadelphia Bulletin in March 1953.) We looked through Northeast High School yearbooks from 1945 – 1957 to determine if the school’s population was increasing to require a new building. We counted the number of graduates. (Philadelphia high schools had graduations in January and June until 1965.) January 1947 – 303 graduates June 1947 – 543 graduates Total: 846 January 1950 – 249 graduates June 1950 – 412 graduates Total: 661 January 1951 – 350 graduates June 1951 – 304 graduates Total: 654 January 1952 - 251 graduates June 1952 - 310 graduates Total: 561 January 1955 – 147 graduates June 1955 – 232 graduates Total: 379 22 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 January June Total 1947 1950 1951 1952 1955 Northeast High School Number of Graduates According to graduation rates, the school’s population was not increasing but was decreasing. There was an increase in the number of African American graduates. The following is the number of African American graduates each year: January January January January January January / June / June / June / June / June 1957: 1947: 1951: 1952: 1955: 1956: 4.7% of graduates 10.9% of graduates 17.3% of graduates 22.0% of graduates 36.6% of graduates 46.4% of graduates 50.00% 40.00% 1947 1951 30.00% 1952 20.00% 1955 1956 10.00% 1957 0.00% African American Graduates of Northeast High School 23 When we examined the Megaphone on data for incoming students (“Freshmen”), there is also a decline in enrollment from the 1940s to 1950s. The enrollment leveled off in the 1950s. (Philadelphia High Schools were three year school. Junior Highs included 9th graders.) February 17, 1944 issue: 799 Freshmen October 5, 1944 issue: 1400 Freshmen February 1945: “almost 800” Freshmen October 4, 1945 issue: 1,042 Freshmen February 4, 1948 issue: 749 Freshmen (article also states there were 668 Freshmen in February 1947) October 7, 1948 issue: 869 Freshmen from 16 Junior High Schools September 1951 – 702 Freshmen September 1952 – 621 Freshmen March 11, 1953 issue: 430 Freshmen from 11 Junior High Schools (FitzSimons, Penn Treaty, Vaux, Stetson, Cook, etc.) October 21, 1953 issue: 613 Freshmen from 14 Junior High Schools (Stetson, Penn Treaty, FitzSimons, Jones, Vaux, Cook, etc.) October 20, 1954 issue: 695 Freshmen from 13 Junior High Schools March 10, 1954 issue: 406 Freshmen March 16, 1955 issue: 393 Freshmen from 7 Junior High Schools October 19, 1955 issue: 604 Freshmen from 10 Junior High Schools March 14, 1956 issue: 323 Freshmen from 9 Junior High Schools Freshmen enrollment 1944 - 1955 1400 1200 1944 1000 1948 800 600 1951 1952 1953 400 1954 200 1955 0 24 Not everyone agreed with moving the “Faculty, traditions, alumni, endowments, and aspirations of Northeast” to a school about 10 miles from its location at 8th and Lehigh Aves. In an opinion piece on June 8, 1965 by Northeaster James Smart, a columnist for The Bulletin, he states “The School was an awesome subculture which made its own rules, where education sometimes seemed to be subsidiary to the overpower idea of Northeast uber alles. It was like no other high school in the city with the possible but never admitted to exception of Central High… anyone who wanted to bother could learn more than at most high schools… The product of the school was an incredibly high-quality Man…” Smart says the move “produced a trauma among the alumni.” He ends with a “healing” on the 75th anniversary of the school where “alumni are beginning to feel that maybe a girl can be a genuine Northeaster.” Joseph Stalmaster, Russell Eck, Wil Green and Philip Capana findings information in the Megaphone 25 Conclusions Based on our research from the census data, the Philadelphia Bulletin and Megaphone newspaper articles and NEHS yearbook, the Alumni Association probably requested the school be moved because the neighborhood near 8th and Lehigh Aves. was changing racially, economically and socially. Philadelphia’s demographic changes were also changing the demographics of the school’s student population. The oral history interviews did not provide conclusive evidence though some of the men interviewed confirmed our findings regarding the neighborhood at 8th and Lehigh Aves. and the changing demographics of the school’s population. Because Northeast alumni had influence over Philadelphia’s School Board and city officials, they were able to influence the School Board to move the school as long as the Alumni Association agreed to a co-educational school. At the time of the School Board’s decision, the vice president of the School Board was an alumnus. Though we do not have written proof that the Alumni Association’s decision was racially or economically motivated, we know that the neighborhood was “changing” from census data. We viewed Philadelphia census data from 1940, 1950 and 1960. We looked at three census tracks adjoining 8th and Lehigh Ave. and three census tracks adjoining Cottman and Algon Aves. The African American population in North Philadelphia, like Philadelphia’s in general, was increasing. The Northeast section of the city was nearly 100% European American. North Philadelphia’s population housing values and income levels were also lower than the Northeast though the income levels by 1960 for North Philadelphia were near the city’s median income level. 26 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% "White" "Negro" "Other" 1940 1950 1960 Philadelphia’s Population from Census Data 1940 – 1960 Population (NOTE: The census data in the 1940s – 1960s used the term “Negro” for African American. Also, everyone labeled “foreign born” was considered ‘white.” In 1940 and 1950, anyone not listed as “white” or “Negro” were labeled “other races.” 1960 was the first time Puerto Ricans were listed separate from “other races.” Philadelphia’s population was 1,931,334 in 1940, 2,071,605 in 1950 and 2,002,512 in 1960. In 1940, 87% of Philadelphia’s were “white” and 13% were “Negro” (term used in the census data). In 1950, 82% of Philadelphians were “white” , 17% were “Negro” and 1.4% “other races.” By 1960, 73% of Philadelphians were “white”, 26% were “Negro” and .3% “other.” 1960 is the first time the census data includes people of Puerto Rican heritage. As Philadelphia’s African American population increased, North Philadelphia’s African American population increased. In 1940, the 8th and Lehigh Area was 94% “white” and 6% “Negro.” From 1950 – 1960, the African American population in North Philadelphia went from 9% to 28%. By 1960, 1.7% of the population near 8th and Lehigh was Puerto Rican. In the Northeast, the “white” population in 1940, 1950, and 1960 the “white” population was 99.9%. 27 "White" "Negro" North Philadelphia’s population near 8th and Lehigh Aves. in 1940 "White" "Negro" Puerto Rican North Philadelphia’s population near 8th and Lehigh Aves. in 1960 Housing We also saw a change in housing ownership. In 1940, 99.7% of homes in North Philadelphia were owned by “whites.” From 1950 – 1960, the number of African Americans that owned homes went from 5% - 29%. Northeast Philadelphia’s homes were owned only by “whites.” Housing values increased in Philadelphia from 1940 - 1960 from $3866 to $8700. Housing values in the Northeast from 1940 – 1960 were 1.5 times greater than the city average. In North Philadelphia, houses in 1940 were 75% of the average city value and decreased to 68% of the average city value by 1960. Therefore, the actual value of homes in North Philadelphia decreased. Housing development was dramatically greater in Northeast Philadelphia because before 1950 it was predominantly open space; North Philadelphia housing was built before the 1930s. For example, from 1940 – 1949, 708 houses were built in Northeast Philadelphia but none 28 were built in North Philadelphia. From 1950 – 1960, 2159 houses were built in the Northeast while 8 were built in North Philadelphia. Income/Education In 1950, North Philadelphians earned 68% and Northeast Philadelphians 1.5 times more than the median income in Philadelphia ($2869/annually). By 1960, North Philadelphian’s earned 95% and Northeast Philadelphians earned 1.7 times the median income in Philadelphia ($4248/annually). Therefore, North Philadelphia were gaining income by 1960. In 1940, the median years of school completed for Philadelphia was 8.2. By 1960, Philadelphia’s median was 9.6. North Philadelphia had a similar education level to the city as a whole (8.03 in 1940 and 8.65 in 1960. Northeast Philadelphia’s median years completed was consistently higher (1940 – 9.26 years and 1960 – 11.33 years.) Social Changes From newspaper articles, we found there was concern about crime in North Philadelphia and federal funding of housing projects. The article on crime quotes the police commissioner who primarily blames the African American community. The housing articles focus on development of low income housing in North Philadelphia. In contrast, an article on the Northeast describes an industrial boom. According to an article in The Bulletin on March 31, 1954, “Community Anti-Crime War,” “crime prevention officials last night targeted a sprawling section of North Philadelphia between the two rivers and Poplar St. and Lehigh Ave. as a pilot area in the war against crime.” According to the article, this section of the city had the highest crime rate. The article highlights recent murders and gang fights. The Police Commissioner Thomas Gibbons was quoted as saying “You people (referring to African Americans) live in an area that for some reason or other has been branded as the ‘crime belt.’ And yet, I’ve never heard any of you complain about that name. There are more taprooms per block in this area than anywhere else in the city…There are more speakeasies all over the district… All of you must take a more active interest. If you don’t take steps for your own good, if you don’t co-operate with the police, then you will continue to have crime and hoodlums. It’s up to you.” Three ministers took issue with the charge that leaders aren’t doing their share in fighting crime. One said, “We complain about conditions but nothing happens. People here feel their backs are against the wall, that there is no help for them.” The hope was for the plan to 29 form a committee and higher a full-time educator would help lower crime. Two articles on housing, “U.S. Oks Nearly 3 Million for Norris Housing Project,” (The Bulletin, 8/7/51) and “Slum Clearance Project Begun at 10th and Norris” (The Bulletin, Feb. 2, 1952) give information on low income housing being built in North Philadelphia. The area is not adjacent to 8th and Lehigh but it is about 8 blocks away. Another article on housing, “City Reports Good Progress on 2 Big Housing Projects,” (The Bulletin, Oct. 26, 1952), states the city’s “first big low-rent public housing apartment centers are beginning to take shape at 22nd and Diamond and 10th and Norris (Streets).” The projects included 1,122 homes in apartment buildings. It was “the first post-war public housing and slum clearance operation undertaken jointly by the Housing Authority and the Redevelopment Authority.” 22nd and Diamond is closer to Northeast’s athletic fields than 8th and Lehigh. In a 1957 article on housing, “$1 Million Given By U.S. to Clear N. Phila. Slum” (The Bulletin, 5/15/57), states the city received federal money to clear three and half acres in North Philadelphia for public housing. In the early 1960s, article from 1962 (“Labor Agrees to Join War on N. Philadelphia Social Troubles”) (“U.S. to Assist N. Philadelphia Plan for Juveniles”) continue to portray North Philadelphia as a “problem.” In contrast, a March 10, 1961 article in The Bulletin calls Northeast Philadelphia “The City’s Last Frontier.” According to the article, “The Silk Stocking Wealth is Gone but New Plants Bustle in Northeast,” “more than 70,000 person are employed in industries in the Great Northeast… 22% of the city’s entire industrial labor force.” “There are nearly 1,000 manufacturing plants in the Northeast. That’s about one-fifth of all plants in the city.” Another social issue is raised with the addition of classes for “slow learners” at the 8th and Lehigh Aves. school. In 1956 for a new Philadelphia School District program for “slow learners.” In The Bulletin on July 23, 1956, “New Northeast High School Will be Co-Educational,” it states “… occupational courses are being developed for slow learners with little academic desire and aptitude, so that the reorganized school (at 8th and Lehigh Aves.) may serve directly the needs of certain students.” In September 27, 1956, a Bulletin article, “Schools to Try Experiment in Class for Slow Learners,” “graduation from high school in two years for slow learners is to be tried next year in a small experimental way in the Philadelphia public schools.” It was a “two-year terminal occupational course for slow-learning boys and girls… The classes for boys will be in a part of the old Northeast High School at 8th and Lehigh Aves…. the present building will receive a new name.” If Northeast High School had remained at 8th and Lehigh, would it have been selected for a “slow learners” program? 30 When we interviewed alumni, the reasons for moving the school were varied. Some said it moved because it belonged in the “northeast” section of the city. Others said it moved because the neighborhood at 8th and Lehigh was changing and race and class played a role. (See “Alumni Interviews.”) According to our research, the school became coeducational because it was part of the agreement made with the School Board in order to relocate the school. The School Board was not going to build two schools to maintain a single gender school. It should be noted that the building at 8th and Lehigh Ave., which was renamed Edison High School, remained a “boys school.” Philadelphia had a number of single gender schools until the 1980s. For example, Central High School became co-educational in 1983 following a court ruling. Other Philadelphia schools like Edison High School, William Penn High School, Kensington High School and Ben Franklin High School also became co-educational in the 1980s. What we would like to find out… It is clear why Northeast High School became co-educational. But, why did Northeast became a neighborhood school when it moved to the Northeast? Why didn’t it accept students from around Philadelphia just like Central High School? Northeast was originally designated for students “north of Broad Street and north or east of Ridge Ave.” (Archive 75 by Philomena G. O’Hanlon) At 8th and Lehigh, there was an initial entrance exam. Students came from throughout North Philadelphia, Kensington, Logan, Frankford, and other Philadelphia neighborhoods. Students were from up to 12 Junior High Schools in the 1950s. At the Northeast location, the policy changed. According to The Bulletin article dated 7/23/56, “New Northeast High School Will Be Co-Educational,” “about 2800 boys at the present old Northeast High building, 8th and Lehigh Aves., will not be transferred…. Students who come under the ‘grandfather clause’ of school regulations – whose grandfathers went to Northeast – may ask to be transferred to the new school.” This was different than what 31 happened when Central High School moved in 1938/9. “About 70% of the academic pupils were transferred...” “But, there will no such mass transfer of pupils to the new Northeast High.” In a Philadelphia Inquirer article, “Northeast High Opens Monday,” (2/7/57), 168 students were transferred from Olney High School, 863 from Lincoln High, 51 from Frankford High and other students were recent graduates of Wilson and Fels Junior High Schools. The new school’s boundary lines were “… Roosevelt Blvd. to the east, Knorr St., Montour St., and Tyson Streets on the south, city Line, Cottman Ave., and Fillmore Sts. on the west and Pennypack Creek on the North.” (George Washington High School was not built in 1957.) Because Northeast became a neighborhood school, and only allowed grandchildren of alumni to attend the new school at Cottman and Algon Aves., the school became a European-American school. There were few African American students in Philadelphia in the late 1950s – 1960s whose grandfathers had attended Northeast High School. In the Intergroup Education Action Research Seminar Report on Northeast High School, 1960 – 1961, it highlights “certain unique characteristics of the school and the community, however, are of prime significance… Until about a decade ago, Northeast Philadelphia was a suburban, almost rural, community…. Occupied almost entirely by middle class, white, Protestant families…. With the population explosion in the city and the population shifts to the outlying suburbs during the last decade, the Northeast section of Philadelphia underwent phenomenal growth and development…. With this rapid influx came a change in the ethnic pattern of the community. Most of the newcomers were Jewish families, whose culture, language, and religion were very different from those of the original German-American Protestants. When Northeast High School opened in its new location at Algon and Cottman Aves. in February 1957, the school population was approximately twothirds Jewish. To date, this proportion has increased to about threefourths… There are six Negro pupils in Northeast High School… A few Chinese families live in the area…” The seminar posed two questions. The first was how to “help its Jewish and Gentile students understand, appreciate and respect each other.” The second question was “How can Northeast High School, an almost completely white school, help its students to understand, appreciate, and respect people of other races?” By looking through Northeast yearbooks, we found between January 1959 – June 1961, 1937 students graduated from Northeast High School. 1000 were females and 937 were males. All but two of the graduates were European-American. There were two African American male graduates. By creating a neighborhood school, Northeast was no longer an integrated high school. 32 This did not begin to change until the late 1970s when the School Board instituted a voluntary integration program. By 1978 – 1979, 13.7% of Northeast students were African American and 1.2% Latino. By 1981 – 1982, 26.1% of Northeasters were African American and 1.4% Latino. (School Board pupil enrollment data). In the Northeast High School evaluation from April 1979, 75% of the students live inside the geographic boundaries and 25% attend for the Science Magnet School or as part of the integration program. “The majority of Northeast High students are members of average, white middle class families which English is the spoken language….about 17% of the students are black (and from outside of the geographic area)…. We also have recent Russian, Greek and Israeli families…learning the English language… The students who come to Northeast from outside the geographic boundaries of Northeast represent all areas of the city and all ethnic backgrounds. This influx reestablishes Northeast as a city school rather than an area school, and we now reflect the city profile … rather than an isolated community.” Therefore, it took more than 20 years for Northeast High School to again become an integrated high school. future steps Through our research we assume the racial, economic and social changes in the neighborhood near 8th and Lehigh Aves. were some of the reasons the Alumni Association approached the School Board to ask that Northeast High School be moved. Though the school is now geographically in the northeast section of Philadelphia, it does not explain why the new building at Cottman and Algon had to be named “Northeast High School.” When Lincoln (1950) and Washington High Schools were built (1963), they received new names. The reason also could not have been the age or condition of the building at 8th and Lehigh Aves. The building at 8th and Lehigh remained Edison High School until 1988 when Edison was given a long promised new building near Front and Hunting Park Aves. Today, the building at 8th and Lehigh is Julio DeBurgos Middle School. We learned that some alumni from the 1950s supported the move and others did not. We learned that some people who lived near 8th and Lehigh and attended the building when it became “Edison High School” did not support the move. Nevertheless, our research is not complete. In order to find our why the school was moved, we need to find the NEHS Alumni Association minutes from the early 1950s to read about the 33 discussion held by the Alumni Association Executive Committee that prompted them to request a move. According to The Alumni Association of NEHS 75th Anniversary Historical Record (1965), the booklet was created with “information from Association minutes, the Treasurer’s records that are available… and newspaper articles. Therefore, there may be minutes. We also need to interview many more people, including many more alumni from the 1950s, alumni from the 1940s and Edison High School alumni from 1957 – mid 1960s who chose to stay at 8th and Lehigh Ave. We could put an advertisement in the Alumni Association newsletter and in local papers to find more alumni to interview. A few students met alumni by chance (in a barber shop and at an electronics store) who told them the school was moved because 8th and Lehigh was becoming a “slum” neighborhood. Unfortunately, we assume the School Board members are not alive and therefore we’d have to try to find the connections between the Alumni Association members to School Board members to determine how political connections influenced the decision. We do know Walter Biddle Saul, Esq., president of the School Board, was the guest speaker at the Alumni Association’s Annual Banquet in 1953. (The Alumni Association of NEHS 75th Anniversary Historical Record) We also need to find more information on the status of the School Board in the 1950s since it was under the Philadelphia Court. Lastly, we need to examine more census data. We need to look at the neighborhood data from the feeder Junior High Schools in 1940, 1950 and 1960. For example, FitzSimmons, a feeder Junior High School, is in the Strawberry Mansion section of Philadelphia. When did the population of Strawberry Mansion change from predominantly European-American to AfricanAmerican? If there was a demographic change in the feeder Junior High Schools population, did this influence the decision? Front door, 8th and Lehigh Ave. 34 Interview with Northeast High School and Edison High School Alumni Dave Carr Interviewed by Evan Lessa and Michael Ivers Written by Evan Lessa Mr. Dave Carr graduate from Northeast High School in 1950. He lived near Kensington Ave. and Orleans Street. He started out in the academic program but switched to the vocational art course. Art was his favorite class and he least enjoyed math. He was involved in Cross Country and followed the other sports teams. He had a lot of good friends in high school His most memorable time at Northeast was when the legendary Babe Ruth visited and signed the Northeast autograph book. Many famous people visited Northeast. The great linebacker on the New York Giants was recently at the Alumni Luncheon at Dugans Restaurtant in May 2000. When asked why he thought the school was moved in 1957, Mr. Carr said Northeast had was growing and needed a school; northeast is where it should be. It had to be co-educational because the girls needed to go somewhere too. It would have made no sense to build two schools. 35 Ronald H. Colston Interviewed and written by Elizabeth Jean and Patricia McGonagle Mr. Colston attended Northeast High School from 1953 – 1956. He lived in North Philadelphia, a couple of blocks from Dobbins High School. He was required to take English, chemistry, physics, biology, algebra, geometry, and trigonometry. He liked all subjects because school was fun. “When I went to school, it was all boys so the teachers could let their hair down, it was less rigid, and it was always fun going to school.” Mr. Colston was involved in extracurricular activities like all the other students at Northeast. He played football and in the three years he was there, they only lost one game in 1954. He was also involved in track. According to him, everyone who went to Northeast was involved in sports because that was what Northeast was known for beside academics. He liked the teamwork. It didn’t matter where you were from; it was a melting pot. School pride was awesome. One of the saddest days in his life was when he had to graduate. If he could change anything about his high school experience, it would be to have his picture in the yearbook. Mr. Colston was the only African American on the prom committee and traditionally the members would have their pictures put in the yearbook. His picture wasn’t in the yearbook. He will never forget; there was a certain amount of racism. Mr. Colston believes when the decision was made to move Northeast everyone was mad. It meant the trophies were being moved up to the “boondocks.” Although they appreciated the school becoming coeducational, “the girls didn’t earn those trophies.” The school would eventually become co-educational because the laws changed and forced schools to go co-ed. He assumed the school was going to move because the neighborhood was changing. 36 Jim Eagen Jr. Interviewed and written by Jennifer Miller and Michelle Longenecker Mr. Eagen graduated from Northeast in June 1950 with over 400 students. He lived in Harrowgate; he walked from the 34oo block of Kensington Ave. to 8th and Leigh Ave. He studied math, history, music, English and the required mechanical arts classes like machine shop and pattern making. He worked on the Megaphone staff doing “gopher” jobs; he worked after school. He enjoyed high school because of friendships but lost contact with most people. They didn’t have a reunion until the 50th anniversary. Northeast had students from all over Philadelphia – West Philly, South Philly, Somerton, Holmsburg, Kensington, and all over the city. When he started school, Lincoln High School wasn’t built. He lived closer to Frankford High School than Frankford. He doesn’t know what it would have been like to go to a co-educational high school. He thinks the move had to do with City Hall politics; they didn’t want to build two schools so it became co-educational. Ira Feldman Interviewed and written by Joe Stalmaster and Phil Capanna Mr. Feldman started at Northeast in January 1949. He lived in Strawberry Mansion and Logan neighborhoods. He took the academic track and loved music. He liked everything about high school, especially going to the games. He wishes he had played in the band. He thinks the school moved because of the declining population in the area (at 8th and Lehigh Aves.) The school was old but it became Edison so it wasn’t that. The northeast boom is why is became co-ed. He didn’t like the idea of moving the school because of nostalgia and “who wants to move?” Northeast’s legacy is the bond it creates between people. It is a place where you can achieve and try to get ahead while remembering where you come from. Harry Gilbert Interviewed and written by Cortney Catallo and Jillian Stoerrle We interviewed Mr. Gilbert, a current Northeast high school teacher. He did not attend Northeast High School. He attended the building at 8th and Lehigh Aves. when it became Edison High School. He entered Edison in September 1965 and graduated in June 1968. He lived in 37 Fishtown and went to Edison High School because he attended Penn Treaty Jr. High, an Edison feeder school. He still recalls many of his high school days. He described his memories in great detail. He had many requirements for graduation including English, Spanish or French, Physical Education, Math and Science. “The worst subjects were taught by the driest teachers.” He was active in the school yearbook and newspaper. He wasn’t confident enough to try out for baseball and football. “I was lazy. I just wanted to get good grades and go home.” Many of his memories were not what he called “fond.” He feared going to school each day. Edison’s location at 8th and Lehigh wasn’t a great neighborhood by 1965. To top it off, the fields weren’t even near the school; they were at 29th and Clearfield. “It was tough enough being white at 2:30 pm at 8th and Lehigh; I wasn’t going to test 29th and Clearfield at 4:30 pm.” “Remember the good times. They seem to get better with age. The older you get, the better the old days seem.” There were good reasons to move the school but a NEW location should be a NEW name. 8th and Lehigh should have stayed Northeast. Cottman and Algon should have been Edison. The decision “sucked.” There was a mass exodus of Jewish and other whites from North Philly to north of Bridge Street. The alumni had political connections. No one wants to graduate from a good school that becomes bad. In truth, Northeast was always “2nd banana” to Central High. South Philadelphia High went through a similar process but they stayed in the neighborhood. If Northeast would have stayed at 8th and Lehigh we might have had alumni, scholarships, better teachers and staff. Al Goodyear Written by Antonio Cobette Mr. Al Goodyear attended Northeast High School from 1949 – 1952. He graduated with the class of 100. He was a fan of math but didn’t like language classes. When Mr. Goodyear was in school, the northeast section of Philadelphia was still growing and it needed a new school. New houses and stores were built. More people were moving to the northeast. Though the new school was newer and better, he didn’t like the change. He said “putting the name Northeast on a building I had never attended leaves me feeling cold.” He said he felt like a stranger visiting the new school. 38 Donald Hackney Interviewed by Agnieszka and Casey Maron Written by Agnieszka Szymula Donald Hackney graduated Northeast High School in January of 1957. His is a retired high school teacher and is presently very active in the Northeast Alumni Association. He will become the president of the Alumni Association next year. Donald Hackney shared many high school memories with us. He belonged to many extracurricular activities such as basketball and track. As a class officer, he set an example to others that you can achieve anything you want in your life if you really want it. He was also one of three Honor Men. Honor Men were chosen for being the most outstanding academically and athletically for each graduating class. Each Honor Man received a golden watch. When Mr. Hackney attended Northeast it was located at 8th and Lehigh Aves. He remembers how most African American were chased from school by whites. By 1955, as the neighborhood changed racially, this threat changed. It wasn’t such a great memory but one that is still in his head. At the time, the school was said to the third greatest and richest school in the United States. Mr. Hackney said the uprooting of the high school and moving the name to the northeast was a major event in the lives of the students at 39 that time. He believes the school was moved for two reasons. In the eyes of his African American peers the decision to move the school was racially motivated. Until 1950, the school was predominantly European American. As the racial composition of the city changed, more African American began to attend Northeast High School. The assumption was the “powers that be” in Philadelphia, many who were Northeast graduates, were not going to let Northeast High School become a predominantly African American school. Since the new school was being built in the northeast section of the city, they could move the school’s name with less conflict. The school’s new location would be modern and state of the art. He has a friend went to Overbrook; he said Overbrook High School was a predominantly Jewish school. Today it is an African American school. The Overbrook Alumni Association can’t relate to the current student body and vice versa. That probably would have happened to Northeast High School. He didn’t like that the school was moved because it was his school and like his family. Students had no say for the most part in whether or not the school would be moved. The student body was not made aware of what was happening. Mr. Hackney & Casey Maron 40 Gerald Mayall Interviewed and written by Janki Patel and Jobby Philip Gerald Mayall graduated from Northeast High School in June 1954. He lived near Front and Tioga. It was a two mile walk to school. He was required to take college preparation courses such as math, science, social science, and English. They were not required to take any shop classes. He enjoyed chemistry. He had an incredible teacher named L.K. Smith that inspired him. He enjoyed all of his classes; “school was a blast.” He played soccer and they were city champions. He was also the treasurer of the senior class. The school had a huge impact on him. He became a science teacher and coached soccer at the University of Pennsylvania. He enjoyed Northeast because “we were a band of brothers.” He had outstanding teachers. He thought it was a great idea to move the school to Cottman and Algon Aves. He found out it was moving at an Alumni Association meeting in 1955. It was exciting because there would be a brand new building, new labs, and the sports fields were right out back. At 8th and Lehigh the students had to take trolleys to get to the sports fields. Nevertheless, there was a lot of criticism at the time about moving the school. He thinks the Alumni Association wanted the school in the northeast to have a more academic student body. The school had to become co-educational. All boys schools were on their way out. He taught at Northeast when it became co-educational and liked it both ways. Patricia McGonale , Elizabeth Jean, Janki Patel and Jobby Philip searching the Megaphone for information on Northeast High School. 41 Frank Mertens Interviewed and written by Christine Griffis and Oksana Padus Joseph Rosskowski, Christine Griffis, Frank Mertens Frank Mertens attended Northeast High School from 1947 – 1950. He lived near Kensington and Somerset Aves. He walked to school to save money; the #54 trolley went near his house and pass the school. He walked to cut down on “car fare” because he had to take the trolley to the athletic fields at 29th and Clearfield and to an after school job. He took the academic classes like English, math, history and science. Language was optional but he took two years of Spanish. Students also took one mechanical shop class each year. He participated in track and cross country; he “lettered” two years in a row. He enjoyed high school because of the friends he made. If he could change anything about his high school experience, he wouldn’t have worked. Almost everyone had an after school job to help their families. Northeast High encouraged students to participate in activities. Students were more determined than today. School was very formal; some teachers required students to wear a tie in class. The school’s 42 legacy is its spirit, its alumni’s accomplishments and the Alumni Association. About a week after he graduate in June 1950, the Korean War started. Many graduates joined the military; he joined the navy. When they came back, they didn’t come back to the old neighborhoods; the neighborhoods were changing. The school at 8th and Lehigh was beautiful; it had a great big pipe organ and stained glass windows. But, it was a fire trap and crowded. The land in the northeast was farm land. Everyone was moving to the northeast. The Northeast Alumni Association was powerful; they probably said “they’re building new schools so we are going to get one.” He wasn’t there when the change took place so it didn’t affect him. Thomas Mulvihill and Chester Nieckoski Interviewed and written by Greg Messer Thomas Mulvihill and Greg Messer Chester Nieckoski Thomas Mulvihill and Chester Nieckoski graduated from Northeast High School in 1953. They both lived in Port Richmond. Chester prepared for an engineering career; most of his classes were in Mechanical Arts. Thomas took the “regular” general education courses – math, science and English. Both men were Northeast athletes. Chester played JV baseball and was a basketball forward. He has to stop playing because of an after school job. Thomas played JV football; he was a center field man. Both feel Northeast gave opportunities to enhance their education and sports activities. Thomas said if he had gone to a Catholic high school, he would not have been as interested. Chester said Northeast prepared him for the future. They both enjoyed talking with other students and enjoyed their teachers. Most of the teachers were men. 43 When asked about moving the school, Chester said he didn’t like the decision because he thought it should have stayed at 8th and Lehigh. “It’s now just a building to me.” He is glad, though, the new school took the name proudly. The new school also had to change the school song. It was “Loyal sons are us.” Now it is “Loyal all are we.” Thomas was saddened by the move but he supported it. The 8th and Lehigh school was getting run down. According to Chester, the school was moved because of money. A lot of kids stopped going to school when it moved. When they went to Northeast, they thought it was like Central High School. The teachers were great and they helped the students. One teacher, Dr. Young, helped Chester get a job. Philip Capanna, Dr. Pakman and Steven Jennings Leonard Pakman Interviewed and written by Steven Jennings and Russell Eck Mr. Packman attended Northeast High School from January 1948 – January 1951. He lived at 7th and Poplar Streets. It was out of the district so he used his uncle’s store address at 22nd and Columbia (Cecil B. Moore Ave. today). He took academic classes and enjoyed everything except Chemistry 2. He was involved in student court and the Spanish Club and he designed the class pin. He also liked being part of the 44 Honors Club because it was a group of about 25 kids who were close and the teachers were the best. Since Mr. Packman graduated in 1951, he wasn’t affected by the move. He assumes it was done for financial reasons and the neighborhood was changing. He agreed with the move to co-educational because it is better to attend a non-segregated school. Joseph Rosskowski and Dave Nucklow Interviewed and written by Jennifer Miller and Michelle Longenecker Mr. Rosskowski and Mr. Nucklow attended Northeast High from 1947 – 1950. They lived near the school. Mr. Nucklow enjoyed history and art but did not like math. Both took woodworking, metal shop, and auto mechanics. Mr. Nucklow was involved in track and cross country. Mr. Rosskowski was involved in Circle Hi-Y, baseball, football and fencing. Both enjoyed the fellowship of friends. Most of their neighborhood friends went to Northeast. Northeasters were orderly, disciplines and respectful. They had to walk down the halls a certain way. When they entered Morrison Hall it was like entering church. Mr. Nucklow didn’t like the decision to move the school. He knew the school was getting old and worn out. It would have remained an all boys school; they learned more at an all boy’s school. Mr. Rosskowski said he understood the need to move the school. The building was a fire trap at 8th and Lehigh. The inside was (is) all wood – the stairs and the floors. The outside was (is) beautiful though. The school at Cottman and Algon is in the Northeast; 8th and Lehigh became North Philly. Mr. Nucklow thought money and religion played a role in moving the school. A group who wanted their children to go to a new modern school had the money so the new school was built. Both men thinks it became co-educational because it was a sign of the times. He also said the Second World War and the Korean War may have influenced the move. Guys were getting killed and wounded. There were more women and they couldn’t afford to build two schools. It had to go co-educational though the former graduates didn’t want it to be co-educational. 45 (back) Padus, Michelle Longenecker, Christine Griffis, Joseph Rosskowski, Frank Mertens, Michael Ivers, Evan Lessa, (front) Dave Nucklow, John Eagan, Dave Carr John Smith Interviewed and written by Krista Ketter Mr. John Smith graduated from Edison High School in June 1961. (Edison High School was the name given to the building at 8th and Lehigh Aves. when the school moved in 1957). He attended Edison High School because at the time they offered a very good arts and sports program. He enjoyed his high school years. He worked for the school newspaper, was on student council, was vide president of his class and played sports. Mr. Smith was in Junior High when the school was moved. Nevertheless, the move was talked about for years. Not everyone was happy. The students that had to stay at Edison felt they should be in a new school not an old school with a new name. They were promised a new school building. (The new Edison High School was not built until 1988.) Edison High School’s legacy, according to Mr. Smith, became linked to the Vietnam War. More students from Edison High School died in the Vietnam War than any other high school in the U.S. This would be Northeast’s legacy if the building at 8th and Lehigh Aves. remained “Northeast High School.” 46 Anthony Stagliano Interviewed by Vidal Melendez, Michael Sanchez and Mohammad Lami Written by Vidal Melendez Mr. Stagliano started at Northeast High in 1948 and graduated in 1951. He lived in the Frankford section of the city, three blocks from Frankford High School. He took two trolley cars to get to Northeast. It took him an hour to get to school because he rather go to Northeast than Frankford. He was a mechanic arts student and was undecided about going to college after high school. The subjects he enjoyed the most were math and Spanish. The subject he disliked was physics. He was involved in football, track, swimming and was class president. He was also one of four Honor Men. He enjoyed Northeast because it was so unique and he was really impressed with the faculty. He felt like he was in college instead of high school. He liked the way the teachers treated him like an adult and not a child. They had the freedom to leave school for lunch. He believes the decision to move the school was a good decision and geography had a lot to do with it. The northeast was farmland and there were few homes. As the neighborhood grew, what a better name to give the new school than Northeast! He was also glad the school became coeducational. Northeast was ahead of its time. It would also have been too costly to build two schools. Since he was out of school the move didn’t affect him. Since he lived in Frankford, if the school was at Cottman and Aglon when he attended school, it would have been closer to his home. 47 Millard Wilkinson Jr. Interviewed and written by Wil Green Mr. Wilkinson attended Northeast High School from 1950 – 1953. While attending Northeast, he lived in the Richmond neighborhood of Philadelphia, near Frankford and Venango Streets. His classes included language, algebra, geometry, zoology, physics, chemistry, English, history and a wide variety of subjects. It was a heavy academic schedule. He enjoyed math, chemistry and analytical type subjects. He wasn’t the athletic type so he disliked gym. He was involved in the music program and received a chorus award at graduation. He also had a part time job after school which took time away from extra-curricular activities. After graduation, Mr. Wilkinson attended and graduated from Drexel University. He worked at Serta Mattress and eventually went into politics. He was a mayor in New Jersey. Mr. Wilkinson was involved in the Alumni Association when the school moved in 1957. He believes the decision was a good one. The area around Cottman and Algon was farmland and just developing into a neighborhood. The area needed a new high school. The decision contributed to bringing the old memorabilia to the new location to pass on the school’s history. He would have liked if Northeast was coeducational when he attended. Northeast’s legacy lies with its graduates. The graduates give testimony to Northeast’s top quality as a high school. Northeast Memorabilia of the 1950s 48 Oral History Interviews This book is dedicated to our Class 161 (June 2002) Published in April 2002 Hail Northeast Dr. A.O. Michener, NE ‘96 Near a busy city street Stands a noble School: Home of virtue, learning’s seat Owning honor’s rule. Straight and sturdy are thy walls Built for strength and might, So the teachings of thy halls Guide our future right. Refrain: Hail Northeast, Hail Northeast, Loyal all are we, From the greatest to the least, Singing praise to Thee 49 50