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A
History of
Nederland
Education and
the Nederland
Independent
School
District
By
W. T. Block
Part
1: Nederland
Schools from
1898 Until
1950
The
founding of
Nederland,
Texas was a
joint effort
by the Kansas
City Southern
Railroad and
its land
subsidiary,
Port Arthur
Land Company.
The two
companies
planned in
1897 to found
a Dutch colony
in
Mid-Jefferson
County and to
call it
Nederland. In
furtherance of
that end, they
sent three
Port Arthur
Dutchmen,
Albert
Kuipers, G. W.
J. Kilsdonk,
and B. J.
Dijksma as
their land
agents in
Holland to
promote land
sales, and to
accompany the
first
contingents of
immigrants to
their new home
in Nederland.
In 1897 the
land company
built the
3-story,
33-room Orange
Hotel to
accommodate
the
newly-arrived
settlers until
they could
build their
own homes. And
due to the
influx of
Dutch-speaking
children, a
school was
planned from
the beginning
to help the
newcomers
overcome the
language
barrier.
1
By
April, 1898,
many Dutch
immigrants had
already
arrived, and
some had
already
completed
their homes.
In May, 1898,
education did
not lag far
behind for B.
J. Dijksma
reported in a
Dutch
newspaper that
“plans are
afoot to
establish a
school and
engage a
teacher...”2
A
one-room
building was
constructed
behind the
hotel, and a
sixteen-year-old
Beaumont girl,
Lillie White,
was engaged to
teach the
students, who
spoke only
Dutch, and
Klaas Koelemay
was to act as
interpreter.3 Anna
Koelemay
Cooley wrote
in her
memoirs:
“...In 1898 my
father Klaas
Koelemay
taught them
English in
association
with a
Beaumont
woman...”4 Although
the teaching
of English was
prerequisite
to their
learning
process, other
disciplines
such as
reading,
writing, and
arithmetic
were not
neglected.
Some of the
children
attending that
first school
included Joe
and Dirk
Elings,
Johanna
Ballast,
Martin and
Lawrence
Koelemay, and
Elisabeth,
Anna, Julius
and Willem
Westerterp.5
The
school
building
behind the
Orange Hotel
was destroyed
by the 1900
hurricane. In
the meantime,
some early
Anglo
families,
including the
Cookes,
Butlers,
Gibsons,
Spencers, and
Bursons, had
also moved to
Nederland. In
1900 John
Berthold
Cooke, Sr.
took the first
Nederland
school census,
and after the
hurricane of
Sept. 8, 1900,
Cooke and
Frank Butler
went door to
door,
soliciting
funds to build
a new school.6 After
the hurricane,
school was
conducted
temporarily in
the Dutch
Reformed
Church
building at
1003 Boston,
but in 1902 a
new, 2-room
school on the
southwest
corner of the
intersection
of Chicago and
10th
streets was
completed.7
The
first trustees
of the new
school of 1902
were Frank
Butler, R. P.
Forrister, and
W. T. Block
(my father).
There were
only two
teachers at
first, Miss
Lizzie
Waterston, who
was principal,
and a Miss
Neild, who
taught
Spanish. Later
when a school
room was added
to the Dutch
Reformed
Church
building,
Edith Cooke
and Mrs. Paul
Wagner were
added to
either the
substitute or
permanent
faculty. In
1903 there
were only 32
students
enrolled, of
whom 28 were
of Anglo
parentage.8
There are at
least 3
surviving
photos of that
early 1902
school and its
student body,
and in each of
them the
enrollment
varied between
50 and 100
students,
although the
exact years of
the photos are
unknown. Alice
Thompson
(Gentry) was a
member of that
1903
enrollment,
and a part of
her memoirs
follow:
“...The
school was at
present-day 10th
and Chicago
Streets. The
student body
increased, and
they soon
needed more
room; they
soon added a
room onto the
church. I have
a diploma that
I completed
the Nederland
Common School.
We also had a
dramatic
society, which
put on plays;
one of the
plays was
named
“Pocahontas.”
We also
studied
reading,
writing, Latin
and Spanish.
There were
three open
saloons
(Freeman,
Peek, and
Steiner) near
the depot, and
I remember how
much I hated
to walk in
front of them.
Once there
were two
sisters who
taught in the
school, and
one of them
was the one
who taught
Spanish. Her
name was Miss
Neild, and she
taught with
Lizzie
Waterston, the
principal...”9
Among some of
the students
who attended
that 10th
Street school
between 1902
and 1906 are
as follows:
Alice, Cora,
and Susan
Thompson;
Aifke, Anke,
Anna, and
Gerka
Bruinsma; May
and John
Staffen;
Marion, Henry,
and Lampien
Kolb; Lloyd,
Lamont, and
Lerna Hubbard;
Patty and Oma
Freeman; Fred
and Rosa
Nelson; Bertie
Peek, Agnes
and Luisa
Spurlock;
Arthur, Ellen,
and Horace
Cooper; Harold
and Margaret
Cooke; ??
Barfield,
Louie and
Clyde Spencer;
Vernon Butler
(who was
killed in
World War I),
Frank Collins,
Clarence
Kenney, Myrtle
Coffey, Lola
Murrel, Julius
Westerterp,
Marion Wagner,
Lawrence
Koelemay,
Willie
Jackson, Hazel
Lloyd, and
Bennett
Kutcher.
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Student body
in 1903.
Pupils
included
Marion Kolb,
Louie Spencer,
Lloyd W.
Hubbard,
Harold G.
Cooke, Vernon
Butler, Frank
Collins, John
Staffen, Henry
Kolb,
Clarence
Keeney, Arthur
Cooper, Ellen
Cooper, Oma
Freeman, Rosa
Nelson, Myrtle
Coffey, Lola
Murrel, Alice
Thompson,
Julius
Westerterp,
Horace E.
Cooper, Lamont
A. Hubbard,
Martin Wagner,
Lawrence
Koelemay,
Willie
Jackson, Clyde
Spencer,
Bennett
Kutchner, Fred
Nelson,
Margaret
Cooke, Pattie
Freeman, May
Staffen, Hazel
Lloyd, Lerna
Hubbard, Luisa
Spurlock,
Lumpien Kolb
and Gerrit
Jansonius.
Lizzie
Waterston was
the teacher.
F.
A.
Butler, R.
P.
Forrester and
W.
T.
Block, Sr.
were the
school
trustees.
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In
1907-1908
Verna Gibson
founded and
ran the first
kindergarten
in the dining
room of the
old abandoned
Orange Hotel.
Mrs. Alice
Thompson
(Gentry)
taught there
as a
substitute
teacher
whenever Miss
Gibson was not
present. Her
family, the W.
S. Gibsons,
arrived in
Nederland
before 1900,
and they
belonged to
the Methodist
Church in Port
Neches before
there was a
church in
Nederland.11 In
1908 there was
an increase of
50 students in
the Nederland
public school
enrollment.12
There
are other
references to
the early
Nederland
schools. In
Apr. 1905, the
county school
superintendent,
M. L. Moody,
visited the
Nederland
schools, and a
few days later
the students
were
entertained by
a
ventriloquist.13 A
month later,
Miss
Waterston, the
principal, and
Mrs. Wagner
took the
school
students on a
picnic at the
rice field
pumping plant,
where the
former Unocal
refinery docks
are located on
the Neches
River.14
In
May, 1907,
there were
commencement
exercises for
the students.
The Misses
Verna Gibson
and Jo Lou
Kaye
graduated, and
their diplomas
were awarded
by Rev. B. C.
Anderson, the
Methodist
pastor.
Following
graduation,
both of the
Nederland
teachers, the
Misses Lula
and Mary Neal,
left for Fort
Worth. It
should be
pointed out
that these
were only
common school
diplomas,
equal perhaps
to junior high
school. The
first high
school
diplomas were
not awarded
until 1917,
one time only,
and not again
until 1923.
The 1917 and
even the 1923
graduates were
lacking
accreditation
for college
entry unless
they passed
remedial
courses or
examinations.
During many of
those years,
many Nederland
students,
among them
Christina
Doornbos
(Stappers) and
Woodard “Tex”
Ritter, the
cowboy movie
star, had to
ride to school
in either
South Park or
Port Arthur,
traveling
aboard the
interurban
trolley, in
order to
graduate from
high school.15
Another photo
of 1910 (page
61, Nederland
Centennial
History) was
taken with
teacher Gala
Howard on the
porch of the
Dutch Reformed
Church.
Student
photographs
included
Matilda
Langham,
Myrtle
Burnfin, Ray
Butler, Cora
Thompson,
Beulah Roy,
Anka Bruinsma,
Birdie Peek,
Myra Cooke,
May Burnfin,
Elbert
Ingwersen,
Agnes
Spurlock, Mary
Kelly, Ellie
Carmichael,
and Eola
Langham.
With
140 students
recorded in
the Jan. 1912
school census,
the earlier
school
facilities on
Tenth Street
were
overcrowded
and vastly
outdated, and
Nederland
patrons
decided to
build a brick
school
building on
land donated
by Mr. Bluitt
Langham. The
location was a
square block
in the 500
block between
12th
and 13th
Streets, which
is currently
the playground
for Langham
school
students. Mr.
Langham owned
a sugar mill
across the
street from
that location.
The new,
2-story school
was to contain
8 classrooms
and an
auditorium.16
Apparently
only sketchy
information
survives for
the years
between 1911
and 1918.
Carrie Goodwin
wrote in her
memoirs that
she was a
substitute
teacher in
1915, and one
of her
students was
Gardette
Burnfin.17 Mrs.
Anna Marie
Peterson
McLain noted
that her
family moved
to Nederland
in 1917. “...I
remember E. W.
Jackson, the
1923
superintendent.
My teacher was
Alberta Poage;
later also her
sister
Margaret
Poage, who
married W. O.
Haizlip.
Another
teacher was
Lois McIlheny,
who married
lawyer (later
Judge) W. T.
McNeill...”18
In
Sept., 1911,
the county
school board
graded
Nederland,
Dist. 7 as a
“high school,
2nd
class, grades
1-9
inclusive.”19 A
newspaper
reported in
May, 1912,
that:
“...School
will close May
24 (1912).
Commencement
exercise will
be held at the
school house
on Thursday,
May 23rd.
A very nice
program is
being prepared
by the
teachers and
students; the
program will
begin at 800
PM...”20
Some
of the
earliest and
most
significant
information
about
Nederland
schools
appeared in
“The School
Review of
Jefferson
County, Texas
for 1921.” As
of that year
the Nederland
schools
enrolled 256
students, all
of Caucasian
descent. In
1920 the
school was
reorganized to
become the
Nederland
Independent
School
District. At
that time the
school
district
contained 17
square miles
of land, with
a population
of 1,500; and
it had a
taxable value
of $3,250,000.
An election
petition was
presented to
the county
judge; the
election was
held on Jan.
17, 1920, and
it passed by a
vote of 44 to
2.21
During
the first
school board
election
following the
founding of
the school
district, Dr.
J. H. Haizlip
was elected
president; M.
W. Oakley,
vice
president; and
John M. Scott,
secretary and
school
superintendent.
Other elected
board members
included M. G.
Block, C. T.
Ingwersen, W.
F. Goodwin,
and H. E.
Wagner.22
Earlier
in 1917,
Nederland High
School
graduated its
first class of
three
students, but
obviously the
Nederland
school lacked
the
accreditation
needed for
college
entrance. In
fact, the Port
Neches school
senior class
of 1923 still
lacked
accreditation,
and those who
entered
college had to
undergo
remedial
schooling for
sufficient
credits to
enter. The
three
graduates of
1917 included
Gerka
Bruinsma,
Leeman Victor,
and Margie
Gibson. In
that year
their high
school
diplomas were
signed by D.
J. Rienstra,
school board
president; M.
G. Block,
board member,
and E. T.
Dimger
(?-illegible),
principal.23
The
Langham School
faculty in
1921 included
John M. Scott,
superintendent;
and 8
teachers,
namely, Adelia
Richardson,
Lucille Ritter
(sister of
movie star Tex
Ritter),
Virginia
McCowan, Viva
Bell, Louise
Linn, Mable
Jones, Maude
Dickenson,
and Emma
Masterson.24
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Old
Langham in
1920's
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The
salaries of
the Nederland
teachers
varied,
perhaps
according to
their teaching
experience.
The school
superintendent
earned an
annual stipend
of $2,400.
Four teachers
were paid
between $100
and $125
monthly and 3
teachers were
each paid $90
monthly.25 During
the most
recent school
board meeting
in 1921, the
faculty was
increased to 9
teachers, and
the minimum
salary for
teachers was
increased to
$110 monthly.26
During
the
Interscholastic
League meeting
held at South
Park on April
1-2, 1921,
Juanita
Goodwin of
Nederland
placed second
in declamation
for high
school junior
girls, and
Theresa Kaper
won second
place for the
high school
senior girls.
Earnest
Dohmann won
third place
for high
school senior
boys, whereas
John Kaper won
second place
for high
school junior
boys. Lottie
Louise
Cromwell
placed in
junior girls
spelling.
Woodward
Ritter (later
to become the
movie star)
placed first
from South
Park High in
senior boy’s
declamation,
but he lived
in Nederland.27 In
1920 Paul
McNeill placed
in
declamation,
and he and
Francis Wagner
won the
50-yard dash.28
The
Nederland boys
and girls
basketball
teams
participated
in 6 games
each against
Port Neches,
Port Arthur,
and South
Park.29 Although
Langham School
had
basketball,
track and
volley ball,
football was
not introduced
until 1925. By
1921 all
county schools
were subject
to periodic
checkups by
the Jefferson
County school
nurse, and
such checkups
often included
eyes, ears,
teeth,
fingernails,
tonsils, etc.
Immunization
for each
student was
usually
limited only
to small pox
vaccinations.30
Between
1912 and 1920
the 10th
and 11th
grades were
added to the
curriculum,
but the exact
dates are not
readily
available.
About 1922 the
core courses
for freshmen
were English,
Ancient
History,
Algebra, and
either
Physiology or
Geography.
Sophomore
studies were
English,
Modern
History,
Algebra, and
Latin. Junior
year studies
included
English,
American
History, Plain
Geometry, and
Latin. Senior
class studies
included
English,
Civics, with
electives in
Economics,
Plain
Trigonometry,
Commercial
Arithmetic,
French,
Spanish, and
Basketball.31
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Old Nederland
High in 1920's
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Lowell
C. Morgan
recalled in
his memoirs
that he had
played on
Nederland’s
first football
team in 1925.32 Adam
Winters
recalled in
his memoirs
that he
started to
school in
Nederland in
1920. “...In
1924 they
built the new
high school. A
Miss Kennedy
taught me
History; Mrs.
Cora B. Linson
taught me
English. Mr.
Greer was the
superintendent,
and Mr. Adams
was principal
in ca.
1925-1926. C.
O. Wilson came
from Port
Neches in
1925, and he
taught me math
and coached
sports. Mr.
Pietzsch
became
superintendent
in Ca.
1927-1928. My
classmates
were Stan
Hardy,
Katherine
Goodwin,
Elizabeth
Ingwersen,
Hardy Johnson,
Dena DeVries,
William
Doornbos, John
May, Glenn
Spencer, and
Ruby
Snellgrave...”33
As of 1923,
Langham School
already had
two temporary
classrooms in
back of the
school,
because the
presence of
256 students
was
overwhelming
in the least.
At that time
the school
board held an
election to
build a
3-story brick
school with
about 40
classrooms,
auditorium,
gym, study
hall, library,
woodshop, rest
rooms,
offices, etc.
The first bond
election was
for only
$100,000.
Before
construction
could begin,
it was
determined
that the first
amount was
insufficient,
and a second
bond election
to raise
$30,000 more
also passed.
The school was
opened on
Sept., 8,
1924, and it
was estimated
that between
500 and 600
students would
be enrolled in
both schools,
because the
opening of the
Pure Oil
refinery in
1923 had
almost doubled
Nederland’s
population.
Two elementary
grades, 2
junior high
grades, and 4
senior high
school grades
were moved
into the new
building, and
R. V. Greer
was hired to
be the new
building’s
first
principal.
On
March 17,
1928, the
Nederland
school
district
issued another
$75,000 in
bonds “for the
purpose of
adding to the
high school
building. The
additions to
the high
school
consisted of
two wings to
the old
building with
a gymnasium to
the rear of
the
auditorium....The
two wings
added a floor
space for
twelve new
class
rooms...” Also
$7,000 were
left over from
the building,
which were
used to
purchase
lockers,
typewriters,
lab equipment,
etc.
34
In
her memoirs
Mrs. Annie
Marie McLain
described her
employment
with the
Nederland
school
district tax
office, as
follows:
“...I worked
15 years in
the school tax
office with
Mrs. Norene
Barras and
Johnny
Bourque, the
latter being
the tax
assessor...”
The first tax
office was in
a wooden
building about
40 feet
square, and
was located in
the 500 block
of 12th
Street on the
original
Langham School
property.
Bourque was
badly crippled
in both legs,
walked on
crutches, and
he was unable
to take the
large tax
volumes out of
the vault.
When the
present tax
office was
located in the
present
administration
building
during the
1950s, the old
tax building
was moved onto
school
property near
the windmill,
and was used
thereafter as
a storage
building
(although it
has since been
demolished).35
Also
some of the
earliest
Nederland
school
superintendents
and their
approximate
years of
service
included John
M. Scott,
1919-1921; E.
W. Jackson,
1922-1924; R.
V. Greer,
1925-1926; L.
R. Pietzsch,
1926-1935; C.
O. Wilson,
1936-1946; and
C. A.
Matthews,
1946-1958.36
During an
interview with
Albert H.
Rienstra, age
92, on Dec. 8,
2004, Mr.
Rienstra
wanted to
point out the
legacy of his
parents with
Nederland
education.
During an age
around
1920-1925,
when even high
school
educations
were an
exception, and
college
degrees were
rare in
Nederland, six
of seven of
his parents’
children
earned college
degrees. His
father Douwe
(Dan) J.
Rienstra
served as
president of
the Nederland
school board
around
1917-1918. He
also served
about 15 years
on the
Jefferson
County School
Board.
Albert’s
oldest sister
Anna graduated
in the first
class of 1923.
After
graduation
from college,
she began
teaching first
grade at
Langham School
in 1927, and
she retired
with about 48
years of
service Ca.
1975.
Mr. Rienstra
began first
grade in
Nederland in
1919 and he
graduated in
1930. He also
attended South
Park Junior
College and
graduated from
Texas
University
with a BBA
degree in
1935. He
recalled that
some of his
favorite
Nederland
teachers
included Ms.
Ingwersen,
Frances Earle,
C. A.
Matthews, Mrs.
Cora B.
Linson, and C.
O. Wilson. He
recalled
several of his
classmates,
including
Christine
Haizlip and
Brooks Oakley.
Rienstra
recalled as
well that
since he was
red-headed
when he
entered first
grade, he
became the
butt of many
jokes and
name-calling,
and as a
result a fist
fight or two
as well. He
also recalled
an instance
around 1930
when
Congressman
Martin Dies
Sr. gave a
graduation
address. Some
younger boys
that Rienstra
labeled “the
dirty dozen”
started a fire
in a rest
room, burning
paper in metal
trash cans,
etc., which
resulted in no
more damage
than smoke in
the hallways.
The
perpetrators
were rounded
up and dealt
with harshly
by school
authorities,
but were not
arrested.37
During a
similar
interview with
Alice Ruth
Nagle
Bodemuller on
Dec. 8, 2004,
she recalled
that she had
started to
school in 1921
and graduated
in 1931. Both
she and Mr.
Rienstra still
have their
high school
annuals (1930,
1931) as well
as excellent
graduation
photographs in
their
possession.
All but two
years of Mrs.
Bodemuller’s
school years
were in
Nederland.
She recalled
some of her
favorite
teachers as
Ms. McVicker,
her first
basketball
coach; Ms.
Newberry, who
taught her in
6th
grade; and
Marjorie
Newsom, her
home economics
teacher. She
played
basketball for
many years,
and on one
occasion she
played against
Babe
Didrickson,
who advanced
to the
Olympics and
as a
professional
athlete in
golf and other
fields. Mrs.
Bodemuller’s
other
basketball
coaches
included J. A.
Floyd, who was
also junior
high
principal; and
Ms. Floy
Pinkerton,
girls’
athletic
coach.
Mrs.
Bodemuller
also recalled
several
schoolmates,
including May
Doornbos,
Helena
Doornbos,
Rosemary
Barnett,
Lawrence
Ratcliff, Anna
Belle Price
and Wellington
Gibson. She
recalled
school picnics
at Village
Creek, when
Mrs. L. R.
Pietzsch was
the chaperone.
She recalled
when students
built a
bonfire and
roasted
wieners
outside in a
ditch.
Suddenly a hot
dog bun hit
her on the
head, thrown
at her by her
high school
sweetheart and
future
husband, Boots
Bodemuller.
She
recalled too a
high school
play under Ms.
Cynthia Press
when Edna
Dohmann was to
ride across
stage as Lady
Godiva. She
had to read a
poem during
the play about
the English
(Anglo-Saxon?)
invasion of
England. Mrs.
Bodemuller
acted as
secretary,
trainer,
prompter,
etc., helping
the student
thespians to
memorize,
rehearse, and
recite their
parts. She
received
special
congratulations
and
recognition
from her
English
teacher, Mrs.
Linson, for
her role in
the play.38
Among
other students
of the early
1920s, coach
and
Superintendent
E. W. Jackson
trained one of
the early
Nederland
basketball
teams in 1923.
His players
included
Marvin Wagner,
Pete Doornbos,
Harold Morgan,
Earl Kitchen,
Paul McNeill,
Gardette
Burnfin, and
Allison
Creswell.
Photographs of
this team
appear in two
different
publications.39
Another
early school
photograph
depicts the
1922 Langham
school faculty
on a lunch
break. The
teachers shown
in photo
include
Christina
Doornbos
(Stappers),
Lucille
Ritter,
Alberta Poage,
Isabelle
Meyers, Lois
McIlheny, Lois
Bishop,
Octavia
Boozer, and
Marian Windle.40
Another
surviving
photograph is
of the 1923
graduation
class. They
appeared
as-front row-
Octavia
Boozer,
teacher; Ruth
DeLong, Anna
Rienstra,
Maryon Oakley
Margaret
Block, and
Gertrude Conn,
teacher. Back
row included
Alberta Poage,
teacher; Pete
Doornbos,
Supt. E. W.
Jackson, Paul
McNeill, and
Miriam Windle,
principal. The
1923 Port
Neches class
lacked
accreditation
for college
entrance, but
the status of
the 1923
Nederland
graduation
class has not
been located.41
During the
tenure of
Superintendent
R. V. Greer,
C. O. Wilson
left his
position as
principal at
Port Neches,
and came to
Nederland in
1925 as coach
and math
teacher;
within a year
he was
promoted to
principal,
soon after L.
R. Pietzsch
became
superintendent.
Following the
resignation of
L. R. Pietzsch
in 1936,
Wilson was
promoted to
superintendent
by a unanimous
vote of the
school board.
Many firsts or
changes took
effect during
C. O. Wilson’s
tenure at
Nederland
schools. First
he organized
the first
Nederland
football squad
in 1925. He
obtained
cyclone
fencing,
lighting, and
bleachers for
the stadium at
220 So. 12th.
Following the
New London
school
explosion, he
brought C. R.
Sory to
Nederland as
band director.
He also
obtained a new
band house,
new
instruments
and uniforms,
and the band
increased from
24 to 43
students.
Under
Wilson,
Nederland
acquired 32 ½
“affiliated
units” and was
soon
accredited by
the Southern
Association of
Secondary
Schools and
Colleges.
Wilson also
brought
fulltime home
economics and
woodshop
programs to
Nederland, He
also
instituted new
commercial and
science
disciplines;
he also
brought the
first fulltime
librarian to
Nederland, and
organized the
alumni
association.
When I. B.
Griffith
arrived as
coach,
Nederland
defeated Port
Neches in 1936
for the first
time. After
serving
throughout the
World War II
years, Mr.
Wilson
contracted
multiple
sclerosis in
1945, which
forced his
retirement and
replacement by
Mr. C. A.
Matthews.42
The 1928
Nederland High
School annual,
The Pilot, was
certainly one
of the first
published by
the school in
glossy
hardback for
graduating
seniors. The
faculty of
that year
included C. O.
Wilson
(principal,
coach,
mathematics);
R. E. Hilliard
(science);
Mary M.
Kennedy
(history);
Ruby Patricia
Kerr (Latin,
Spanish); Hugh
D. Keeling
(commercial);
Willie
McVicker
(Wildcat
girls’
basketball
coach, home
economics);
Cora B. Linson
(English); and
Nettye Mae
McNeill
(music).
In 1928 the
number of
graduates
increased from
6 in 1923 to
14 in 1928.
They included
Hardy Johnson,
Ronald Keeney,
John May,
Marie Rienstra
(d/o George
Rienstra),
Ruby Beatrice
Snellgroes,
Elizabeth
Wilson, Adam
Davis Winters,
Mary Francis
Coffman,
Marguerite
Cromwell,
Ellen DeLong,
Dena DeVries,
William
Doornbos,
Kathryn
Goodwin, and
Sterling
Hardy.
By 1928, there
were already a
variety of
extracurricular
activities,
campus clubs,
etc., in which
students
participated.
These included
the Literary
Society, Girls
Glee Club,
Business Club,
Science Club,
Spanish Club,
Music and Art
Club, Curtain
Club, as well
as sports.
Other
activities
included the
Halloween
Spooks
Convention,
during which
the short
play, “Which
Witch?” was
presented;
also the
operetta,
“College
Days,”
presented by
the senior
class; as well
as
Interscholastic
League.
Although there
was no mention
of a senior
prom, there
seemed to be
other
delightful
activities for
the senior
class, i.e.:
picnics,
parties in
party dresses,
Kathryn
Goodwin’s
dinner party,
a “delightful,
old-fashioned
dinner” in the
Ingwerson
home, hosted
by Marguerite
Cromwell and
Elizabeth
Wilson, and
topped off by
a matinee
party at the
new Jefferson
Theater in
Beaumont. The
highlight of
the seniors’
social season
was a
dinner-dance
aboard the
pleasure boat
S. M. Bidwell,
with Captain
Carlyle
Plummer at the
wheel.
The
1928 football
team included
Francis
Wagner, Horace
LeMeur, Brooks
Oakley, J. B.
Samfod, S.
Hardy, John
Bodemuller,
Bill Doornbos,
Guy Van Cleve,
L. Hardy, U.
B. Morgan,
Mayo Premeaux,
Elmore
Creswell,
Hardy Johnson,
Robert
Hanchett, and
John May. The
lady Wildcat
basketball
team under
Coach McVicker
included M.
Rienstra, May
Doornbos,
Ellen Lee,
Louise Massey,
Eliz. Wilson,
Carrie L.
Townsend, M.
Cromwell, Dena
DeVries,
Nellie
Rauwerda, Lena
Wooten, Ruby
Snellgroes,
Esther
Dohmann, and
Hazel Block.42a
Several new
faculty
members came
on board in
1929. They
included
Francis
Campbell
(coach,
science);
Frances Earle
(history); J.
A. Floyd
(economics);
Virginia Imig
(music); Clark
A. Mathews
(woodshop,
mechanical
drawing);
Marjorie
Newsom (home
economics);
Cynthia Press
(Spanish,
stenography;
and Estelle
Wood (English,
history).
Also in 1929,
the graduating
class
mushroomed
from 14 to 30
members. They
included Ruby
Baker, W. A.
Barnes, Hazel
Block, John
Bodemuller,
Johnny
Bourque,
Bradley
Brandin, James
Campbell,
Elmore
Creswell,
Margaret
Davis, Lloyd
Derouen,
Esther
Dohmann, Lory
Fontenot,
Helen Gibson,
Frank Griffin,
John Clark
Griffin,
Robert
Hanchett,
Gladys Hayes,
Ras Johnson,
Ellen Lee,
Horace LeMeur,
Corinne
Meredith,
Edith Lee
Meredith, U.
B. Morgan,
Harry Newton,
Westley
Paulus,
Juanita
Pessarra,
Pattie Peveto,
Louis
Pietzsch,
Nellie
Rauwerda,
Ceyril
Reynolds, J.
B. Samford,
Frank Shannon,
Carrie Lou
Townsend,
Francis
Wagner, and
Lena Wooten.
In 1929,
Nederland
scored twice
as many points
as its nearest
rival in
interscholastic
competition,
winning 5
silver cups,
with first
places going
to Bradley
Brandin,
Sidney
Pietzsch,
Wilda Lisle,
Pattie Peveto,
Adelaide
Cooper, Nellie
Belle Johnson,
James
Koelemay,
Marie
Rienstra, Mary
Louise
Perryman,
James Morgan
and Eleanor
Hackworth.
Also presented
was the senior
class play,
“High Flyers.”
The seniors
also enjoyed a
Senior Day
off, various
parties, and a
Junior-Senior
Banquet.
On
Oct. 19, 1928,
Nederland
savored its
first victory
over the Port
Neches
football team.
Nederland
players of
that year
included C.
Gibson, R.
Bodemuller, T.
Smith, J.
Hardy, Bill
Doornbos,
Davis, Baker,
R. Hanchett,
C. Reynolds,
H. Lemeur, U.
B. Morgan, C.
Morgan, L.
Hardy, G.
Spencer, L.
Derouen, E.
Creswell, R.
Johnson, J.
Samford, and
W. Weigmann.42b
The
Nederland
School Board
of 1928-1930
included R. L.
Vernor,
president; C.
D. Wagner, L.
C. Sherman,
Lawrence
Koelemay, J.
C. Griffin, W.
K. McCauley,
and P. DeLong.
Vernor was
superintendent
of Pure Oil
refinery; C.
D. Wagner was
a well-known
realtor and
early rice
planter; and
L. C. Sherman
was an early
contractor.
Koelemay owned
a feed store;
McCauley was a
realtor and
retail lumber
dealer; and
DeLong owned
an auto agency
and repair
business.43
Perhaps
the Great
Depression,
followed
closely by
World War II,
was to fashion
a Nederland
senior and
junior high
school faculty
of visible
permanence,
albeit with an
occasional
addition or
loss. And
although the
writer can not
by any means
speak for
everyone, it
was a faculty
that, if not
entirely
beloved, was
at least
highly
respected.
They included
C. O. Wilson
(math,
principal,
superintendent
after 1936),
Cynthia Press
(Spanish), C.
A. Mathews
(manual
training,
principal),
Marjorie
Newson (home
economics),
Mrs. Cora B.
Linson
(English),
Frances Earle
(history), H.
D. Keeling
(commercial),
and Edson Mae
Johnson
(librarian)
all arrived
during the
latter 1920s,
and nearly all
of them
remained until
the end of
World War II.
Other teachers
who were
employed as of
1930, but who
may not have
remained long
included
Estelle Wood
(biology,
English), J.
C. Traylor
(science,
coach), Edythe
Maricle
(public
speaking), and
Virginia Imig
(music). Even
in 2004, many
old-timers
remember
Frances Earle
with a special
affinity.44
By
the middle
1930s, other
faculty
members were
added, to
include Johnny
Konecny
(coach,
science), Ida
May Bernhard
(mathematics),
Elizabeth
Quine
(English),
Floy Pinkerton
(girls’
physical
education),
and I. B.
Griffith
(coach and
boys’ physical
education).45
During
the 1920s, the
building of
Pure Oil
refinery, and
especially
Nederland’s
growth as a
bedroom
community,
doubled the
population and
added
significantly
to the
enrollment of
the Nederland
schools, which
by 1930
numbered more
than 600.
Hence, the
senior
graduating
class
increased from
6 graduates in
1923 to 30 in
1929 and 27
graduates in
1930. The 1930
graduates
included Grace
Hannah, Lynn
Hardy, Walter
Howell, Louise
Hughes, George
Ingram, Wilda
Lisle, Louise
Massey, Cecil
Morgan, Daphna
Morgan, Elna
Morgan, Brooks
Oakley, Annie
Marie
Peterson,
Albert
Riensta, Opal
Smith, Jessie
M. Trotti,
Alvin Barr,
Lerlyne Black,
Mecom Carter,
Erlyne
Cromwell, Inez
Davis, Harry
Doornbos,
Thomas
Fletcher,
Laverna
Franke,
Charles W.
Gibson,
Caroline
Giebelstein,
Harry
Giebelstein,
and Christine
Haizlip. Harry
Doornbos was
killed in the
navy during
World War II,
and as of
1904, Albert
Rienstra may
be the only
1930 graduate
still alive.46
It is indeed
regrettable
that the
author cannot
examine each
graduating
class, which
will result in
a lot of names
being omitted,
and for that
he apologizes.
At least three
Pilot annuals
were not
published
during World
War II, and
even if all
were
available, the
length of this
treatise would
become tedious
and
unmanageable.
Pardon
me, but the
Nederland High
School was
exhibiting a
tinge of
gender
discrimination
in 1930, for
when I look at
the high
school band
photograph, I
have to ask:
“Where are the
girls?” The
band members
included Maloy
Mills, Doyle
Dubose, Paul
Stehle, Sidney
Pietzsch, Joe
Monso, Rowland
Dumesnel, Fred
Chamberlain,
Oscar Ware,
Alvin Ware,
Thomas
Langham,
Leonard
Manning, Leon
Ware, Wilbur
Griffin, J. C.
Kelly, Joe
Hollis, Verlon
McGee, Oliver
Chamberlain,
Fergus Decuir,
and Bandmaster
Johnnie
Franks. C. P.
Wiedeman was
the band
director.47
The
1930 Nederland
football squad
included
George Ingram,
Joe Monso,
Clement
Jennis, Mayo
Premeaux,
Harry Davis,
Judson Hardy,
Houston
Leatherwood,
Goodwin
Griffin, Floyd
Todd, Ray
Oakley, Willie
Lester; Lynn
Hardy,
captain;
Robert
Bodemuller,
Brooks Oakley,
Adam Bellard,
Harry
Giebelstein,
Thomas
Fletcher,
Harry
Doornbos,
Mecom Carter,
Theo Smith,
Walter Howell,
Cecil Morgan,
Charles
Gibson,
Carlton
Lester,
Sanford Kelly,
William
Weigmann, and
Coach John
Traylor.48
The
1930 boys’
basketball
team included
the following
players: Harry
Giebelstein,
Walter Howell,
Theo Smith,
George Ingram,
Lawrence
Foster,
Charles
Gibson, Joe
Monso, Lynn
Hardy, Judson
Hardy, Mecom
Carter, Robert
Bodemuller,
Cecil Morgan,
A. P. Mills,
Goodwin
Griffin, and
Floyd Todd.
The 1930
girls’
basketball
team included
Coach J. A.
Floyd, Jessie
Mae Trotti,
Barbara Smith,
Anna Beth
Price, Dorothy
Mae Hanshaw,
Erlyne
Cromwell, Ruby
Marrison, May
Doornbo, Louis
Massey; Alice
Ruth Nagel,
captain; Anita
Wiegmann,
Eloise
Johnson, and
Edna Dohmann.49
One
school
activity not
previously
noted was the
1930 Halloween
Carnival and
Spooks
Convention.
Christine
Haizlip was
the Queen of
the Carnival,
and she wore a
somewhat
gaudy,
knee-length
black dress
and a very
long black
train.50
The
1930 junior
class became
the 1931
senior
graduation
class; hence,
their names
are listed
here as well,
as follows:
Robert
Bodemuller,
Harry Davis,
Eloise
Johnson, Tommy
Langham,
Sidney
Pietzsch, Anna
Beth Price,
Edna Dohmann,
Helena
Doornbos,
Houston
Leatherwood,
Willie Lester,
Dalton Sherer,
Barbara Smith,
May Doornbos,
Orvil Edwards,
Ethel Manning,
A. P. Mills,
Theo Smith,
Kirtis
Streetman,
Lawrence
Foster, Alice
Franke, Joe
Minaldi,
Louise Mize,
Joe Thorp,
Gladys Wagner,
Audrey
Hamilton,
Dorothy
Hanshaw,
Pearlie
Morrison, Ruby
Morrison,
Oscar Ware,
Louise Weber,
Judson Hardy,
Lena Harrison,
Alice Ruth
Nagel, Ray
Oakley, Anita
Wiegmann, and
William
Wiegmann.51
The 1934
faculty was
basically the
same, with J.
F. Konecny and
Floy Pinkerton
added to the
staff, and the
Misses Maricle
and Imig were
missing. L. R.
Pietzsch and
C. O. Wilson
were still
respectively
superintendent
and high
school
principal.
About 1935 J.
A. Floyd was
appointed
junior high
principal. The
senior
graduating
classes of the
middle 1930s
barely
increased, for
in 1936 Pure
Oil Company
laid off 350
employees in a
single day,
resulting in a
local loss of
population.
The
1934 senior
graduating
class of 41
members
included as
follows:
Winnie Belle
Reed, Clarence
Peterson
(killed in
World War II),
Mary Louise
Perryman, Mayo
Premeaux,
Russell
Vernor, George
Shannon, Iyone
Russell, Marie
Rienstra,
Bobbie
Williamson,
Janice
Williams,
George
Vanderweg,
Leon Ware,
Velma Rae
Yentzen,
Jackson Wolf,
Lillian Wolf,
Juanita
Gregory,
Burrell
Frazier,
Robert
Haizlip,
Clarice
Clotiaux,
Frances
Goodwin,
Arabelle
Adams, Goodwin
Griffin,
Ashton Daigle,
John Goodwin,
Rudolph
Bodemuller,
Wilbur
Griffin,
Laverna Eaves,
Ouida
Eldridge,
Horace
Goodwin, Ruby
Harvill,
Jewell
Hayslette, Joe
Hollis,
Sanford Kelly,
Hester
Leatherwood,
Mary Francis
Konecny,
Lawrence
Koelemay,
Bessie Ruth
Keltner, Inez
Miia, Verlon
McGee, L. T.
McBurnette,
Evelyn Luke,
Rene Mouton,
Joe Monzo, and
Emily Mae
Mize. In the
list of class
wells, Mary
Francis
Konecny left
to her junior
classmate “the
ability to
catch the next
single coach
in matrimony.”52
The
1934 junior
class and 1935
senior
graduates
included Marie
Boudreaux,
Ruth Boyer,
Edma Mae
Brown, Mabel
Collier,
Juliet Davis,
Louree Dold,
Bernice Duhon,
Bernis Ener,
C. W. Field,
Shirley
Gibson, Dick
Haizlip, A. V.
Hamilton,
George Jones,
J. C. Kelly,
John Bunyan
Koelemay, Ruth
Langham,
Leonard
Manning,
Dorothy
Meadows,
Iverson
Meredith, Olga
Miia, Wallace
Mize, Thomas
Moore, Melba
Morgan, Eileen
Muckleroy, Leo
McBride,
Glyndora
McCauley, Earl
McMahan, Fred
Parish, Dennis
Peveto, M. J.
Pichoff,
Edward
Sanderson,
Judith Sehon,
, Loretta
Sherer, Jack
Streetman,
Lesley
Sweeney,
Garrett
Terwey, Wilma
Terwey, Evelyn
Wagner, and
Gordon Wilson.53
In
the summer of
1936, Port
Neches Coach
I. B. Griffith
was fired
because he
asked for a
raise; the
Nederland
School Board
immediately
hired him, and
Coach Konecny
returned to
the science
department.
Although the
Bulldogs
scored 206
points to 72
for the
opposition,
Nederland lost
a
“heartbreaker”
to Port Neches
by a score of
20 to 19.
However, the
Bulldogs
harvested
“sweet
revenge” in
1937. The 1936
Bulldogs
included
Zannet Matte,
James Willey,
Paul Dubose,
J. D. Stark,
Percy Baker,
Jimmy Massey,
J. P. Clark,
Clifford
Broussard, J.
W. Roberts,
Bill Fuller,
Herbert
Foster, Walter
Perryman,
Thomas
Harbour,
Julian
Broussard, R.
B. Gregory,
Olan Whitmire,
Lester
Clotiaux,
Winfred
Gallier, Pat
Morrison,
Clayton
Harvill,
Clarence
Bourque, Noah
Morvant, Ralph
Massey, J. W.
Hise, George
Trotter, Alvin
Ware, Paul
Billingsley,
Fred Arnold,
O. S. Johnson,
Fred Roach,
Laris
Broussard,
Johnnie
Arnold; P. R.
Sikes, line
coach; and I.
B. Griffith,
head coach.54
For
some reason,
the 1937
annual was
named The
Announcer
instead of the
usual Pilot,
and the writer
has often
teased that
the annual
staff must
have been on
welfare or
relief since
the entire
booklet was
completed on
an
old-fashioned
mimeograph
machine, with
resultant poor
quality
photos.
(Actually
there was no
such “critter”
as “welfare or
relief” in
1936, since it
was at the
height of the
Great
Depression.)
The faculty
had hardly
changed an
iota except
that Mr.
Pietzsch left
as
superintendent,
and I. B.
Griffith
became boys
physical
education and
coach.55
The
1937 senior
class of 48
graduates
included Ethel
Adams, Joe
Almendro,
Johnnie
Arnold, Paul
Billingsley,
W. T. Block,
Sylvia
Brookner,
Lester
Clotiaux
(killed in
World War II),
Adele
Creighton,
Luther Defee,
Emma Doornbos,
Hazel England,
Winfred
Gallier, R. B.
Gregory (KIA,
navy in World
War II), Mary
Ida Griffin,
Maxine
Handley,
Lorraine
Hastings, Rose
Mary
Hayslette, J.
W. Hise,
Thomas
Housenfluck,
Edward Hughes
(KIA, World
War II), O. S.
Johnson,
Hollis Jones,
Ollie Mae
Keltner,
Arthur Lee,
Roland Lee,
Alton Lockler,
Anna Mae
Manning, Betty
Lou Manning,
Stanley
Marlow,
Charles
Melling,
Milton Mills,
Seawillow
Morgan, Sam
Pace, Oneida
Quinn, Melba
Rasberry,
Mildred
Ritchie, Fred
Roach, L. D.
Sanford, Jack
Singleton,
Zillah B.
Short, Ethel
Spencer, Marie
Strother, Emma
Terwey, Agnes
Thorp, George
Trotter,
Lillian Ware,
Olan Whitmire,
and Maryon
Ruth Yentzen.56
When
school began
in Sept.,
1936, high
school
enrollment
totaled 240
students, an
increase of 40
students over
the previous
year. The
building still
contained
senior and
junior high
school, plus
the fourth and
fifth
elementary
grades. The
first three
grades were
still in the
old Langham
building,
which would be
its last year,
since the
present
Langham School
was built in
1937. Between
1935 and 1940,
some of the
Langham
elementary
faculty
included Molly
Williams,
Helena
Doornbos,
Gladys Sims,
Anna Rienstra,
Celeste
Kitchen,
Louree Dold
Hollis,
Rosannah
DeYoung, Ruth
Hansbro, Jewel
Smithwick,
Margaret
Walker
Cromwell, and
Emma Risinger.
And for the
first time in
7 years, the
Nederland
Bulldogs BEAT
the Port
Neches Indians
in 1937!57
The Great
Depression,
which had
gripped
Nederland so
tenaciously
between 1929
and 1940 did
not end of
itself; it
simply merged
with World War
II until 16
million people
were in
military
uniform; and
Nederlanders
soon found
employment
either in
shipyards,
refineries; or
at the new
Port Neches
rubber plant,
which began
building in
1942 and
employed
10,000
workers. Also,
the Pilot
annuals after
1937 continued
to be
soft-cover,
and much less
expensive
products than
those turned
out around
1930, or after
1946.
The 72
graduates in
1941 included
Virginia
Arnold, Ethel
Bartels,
Charles
Bishop,
Dorothy
Bonsall,
Wallace
Boudreaux,
Laura Bourque,
Alex
Broussard,
Gloria Mae
Caldwell,
Edward
Campbell, Mary
Louise
Champagne,
Evelyn
Chester,
Muriel
Chester,
Harold
Collins, John
Creswell,
Dorris
Crisman, Harry
Farris, Lillie
Mae Findley,
Catherine
Giebelstein,
Gloria Gish,
June Rose
Gish, Elvina
Green, Ray
Green, Fred
Griffin, Dewey
Guilbeaux, Ray
Hudson,
William
Ingram,
Johnnie Mae
Jefferson,
Billie Jean
Jordan, Jane
Lumpkin,
Kenneth
MacCammond,
Bob McKinley,
Hazel Mize,
Elizabeth
Monks,
Alburtha
Morrison, Emma
Lee
Netterville,
Evelyn
Netterville.
Also, Yvonne
Parish, Gerald
Perryman,
Billie Poss,
Imo Jean
Puntes, Mary
Quebedeaux,
Joyce
Ratcliffe,
Victor
Roberts, Peggy
Jean Rowland,
Gene Rowley,
Richard Roy
(KIA World War
II), Leon
Sanford, J. D.
Savoy (KIA
World War II),
Irma Schell,
Frank Short,
Roland
Singleton,
Marjorie
Stehle, Milton
Sticker,
Willie Ann
Stonecipher,
Dorothy
Streetman,
Kathleen
Tansil, Pearl
Terry, Clyde
Thacker,
Lorraine
Theriot, Marie
Thorp, Alvin
Van Marion,
Hazel Vaughan,
Anna Ruth
Vogelvang,
Lawrence Walp,
Ilma Ware,
Ruthie Mae
Weeks, Barbara
Wendling, Mary
Lou Westberry,
Juanita
Willis, Tom
Wills, Maude
Evelyn Winn
and Emmett
Woodward.
Several
teachers had
been added to
the faculty,
but the older
teachers of
the early
1930s
remained, for
teaching
positions were
scarce during
the
depression.
The new
faculty
included
Maxine Drury
(commercial),
Robert Shepard
(asst. coach),
Robbie Connor
(Spanish), C.
R. Miller
(shop,
mechanical
drawing),
Velma Stoeltje
(home
economics),
and C. R. Sory
(band
director).
The
1941 boys’
basketball
team included
P. J. Granger,
Arleigh Duff,
Robert Goss,
Joe
Williamson,
Alfred Foster,
Billy Fields,
Edwin Roberts,
Billy
Clements,
Kenneth
MacCammond,
Victor Roberts
and J. E.
Barnett. And
the high
school band
had grown to
nearly 70
members.58
Beginning Dec.
7, 1941, the
United States
suffered the
Pearl Harbor
debacle and
was quickly at
war with
Japan,
Germany, and
Italy.
Nevertheless,
Nederland’s
educational
program
continued to
progress as
best it could,
even amid
invasion
jitters,
coastal ships
torpedoed, and
even
blackouts.
And a few new
teachers were
added,
including
Wanda Doggett
(commercial),
Ruth Reed
(girls’
physical
training),
Elmer Brown
(assistant
coach),
Alberta Meetz
(dietician),
Marjorie
Hoffman
(Spanish,
drama), Jane
Marshall
(history), and
Thurman E.
Smith (typing,
bookkeeping).
Once more, 72
seniors
graduated, as
follows:
Harold Bailey,
J. E. Barnett,
Reynell
Bernard, Anna
Broussard,
Harris
Broussard, Ben
Brown, Betty
Brown, Stella
Carrington,
Wanda Lou
Collins,
Gloria
Concienne,
Gerald Crane,
Marion
Creswell,
Horace Crosby,
Lorae Crump,
Gene Davis,
Leona Decuir,
Arleigh Duff
(who won
national fame
as a
musician),
Alfred Foster,
Cozie Belle
Fowler, O. W.
Franke, Mary
Cleo
Frederick,
Wilma Fae
Gibson, Albert
Giebelstein,
Hubert Gore,
Lilian Gore,
Robert Goss,
R. P. Goulas,
P. J. Granger,
Rayford
Guzardo, A. C.
Handley,
Emogene
Hastings,
Edward
Hemmingway,
Leo Hise,
Roberta
Hughes, Ella
Mae Kelly,
Bill Keltner.
Also, Hollis
Paul Kennedy,
Mary Kimler,
Dorothy Mae
Lee, Joyce
Lee, Anna
Belle Little,
J. D. McGraw,
Jesse McNabb,
Dorothy
Marlow, Jimmy
Massey,
Angeline
Maxey, Sigrid
Melling, Mary
Miller,
Marjorie
Morrison,
Doris Pousson,
Allen Prejean,
Terrance
Redditt, J. W.
Rhyne,
Roosevelt
Richards,
Jimmie Ritter,
Edwin Roberts,
Waymon Scott,
Elmer Smith,
Nelson
Sonnier, J. T.
Tansil, Frank
Taylor, Joseph
Terracina,
Milton Turner,
Albert Van
Oostrom, Joe
Ware, Dorothy
Wells, Joe
Williamson,
David Willis,
Dennis Wills,
and Evelyn
Rhea Wilson.
The 1942
Bulldogs
football team
included
Donald
Sanderson,
Howland Reich,
Jack Perryman,
Willard
Sinclair,
Wesley
Weatherly,
Harold Sehon,
Pete Premeaux,
Billy Fields,
Allen Ritter,
Tommy Vinson,
Alfred Foster,
Edwin Roberts,
Barney Green,
Harold McNabb,
A C. Handley,
Elmer Smith,
and J. E.
Barnett.
Also,
Burton
Pousson,
Robert
Crosson,
Stanley
Delahoussaye,
Wilson
Frederick,
Lewis Wallace,
Robert Goss,
Albert Van
Oostrom, Frank
Taylor, Rynell
Bernard,
Harris
Broussard,
Anthony
Concienne,
Jimmy Massey,
Spencer
Ritchie, Joe
Williamson,
and Leo Hise.59
Sadly, the
privations of
war and other
causes
resulted in no
annuals being
published for
the remaining
war years of
1943, 1944,
and 1945.
Perhaps it was
unfeasible and
even
considered
unpatriotic in
the face of
wartime
shortages, and
horrific
military
defeats and
deaths. At any
rate, there
remains a
considerable
famine of
knowledge in
Nederland’s
scholastic
history,
because they
do not exist.
During World
War II, a
large ‘medal
of honor’ sign
or bulletin
board with 200
names of
Nederland
servicemen on
it was mounted
at the corner
of Boston and
13th
Street. Most
were Nederland
graduates, and
about 12 were
killed during
the war.
The 1946
annual
reflects many
faculty
changes that
had taken
place during
the war years;
nevertheless
such teachers
as Frances
Earle; C. A.
Mathews, who
had been
promoted to
superintendent;
and Marjorie
Newson were
holdovers from
1929. The 20
faculty
members
included F.
Earle (social
studies), C.
R. Miller
(principal);
M. Newsom
(home ec), J.
S. Badgett
(band
director),
Jessie Lee
Ross
(science),
Mrs. Ethel
Peterson
(English),
Edna Holder
(commercial),
J. Konecny
(science,
asst. coach)
Mrs. Daisy
Swanson
(librarian),
Mrs. Mabel
Bradley
(commercial),
H. L. McRae
(coach),,
Gladys Estes
(English),
Allie Bland
(mathematic),
T. E. Smith
(mathematics),
Mrs. H. L.
McRae
(English,
history), Mrs.
R. G. Boggs
(Spanish),
Lois Strong
(girls’
phys-ed), Mrs.
Elizabeth Mann
(English) and
Verna Mae
Abel,
dietician.
While the
reading of
countless
names may be
tedious and
cumbersome,
the history of
a school is
much like that
of a church.
Whereas the
history of a
church is of
its
congregation,
not of its
sanctuary and
steeple, the
history of a
school is that
of its faculty
and students,
not that of
its beautiful
buildings and
libraries, its
sparking band
instruments
and uniforms,
nor of its
football
clothing and
stadium. It is
always hoped
that the
knowledge
imparted to
each young
mind might
produce a
political
leader, an
inventor, or
great
scientist; or
if that were
not possible,
at least it
would help
each graduate
to earn a
comfortable
living and be
an asset to
human society.
The year 1946
witnessed a
severe drop in
graduates from
72 in 1941 and
1942 to 55 in
1946. They are
follows: Joyce
Beakes,
Charles Beard,
Billy Beranek,
Rudy Berlin,
Dorothy Brady,
Luther Brown,
Johnny
Clements,
Herbert
Coffman,
Theresa
Concienne, R.
X. Cook,
Averill Davis,
Gloria Davis,
Addie Pearl
Denton,
Marceline
Droddy, Robert
Eagleson,
Lloyd Foust,
Lillian
Gardner,
Marjorie
Gardner,
Robert Earl
Gray, Willie
Jane Griffin,
Guy Haynes,
Sybil
Hemmenway,
Hugh Allen
Hooks, Plas
Howard, Joe
Milton Hughes,
Emma Jeanne
Jones, Vernon
Kimler,
Juanita Keel,
Bill Loudon,
Gerald
McManus, Billy
Darrel Moye,
Pete Premeaux,
Ralph Price,
Opal Quarles,
Catherine
Rauwerda,
Howland Reich.
Also, Tom
Ross, Janette
Sheffield, Don
Sibley, Bud
Smith, Juanita
Smith, Dorothy
Spoor, Mildred
Sumerow, Jack
Sweeney, Wayne
Taylor, Jack
Thompson,
Irving
Townsend,
Bobby Vinson
(All-American
West Point
player shot
down and still
missing in
Vietnam),
Louise
Walling,
Gloria
Weatherly,
Jewel Weeks,
Nella Mae
Westberry,
Etta Alice
Willis, Billy
Joe Wilson,
and Daniel
Zimmerman.
The
1946 boys’
basketball
team included
Bobby Vinson,
Everett
Sanderson,
Averill Davis,
L. G.
Chaddick,
Harold Gene
Palmer, Tryce
Taylor, Walter
Davis, Rudy
Berlin, Bobby
Wooten, Tyrus
Sibley, and
Irving
Townsend. The
1946 sponsors
and maids were
as follows:
Willie Mae
Brousard,
Mildred
Sumerow,
Dorothy Brady,
Theresa
Concienne,
Elaine
Sandlin, Jewel
Jones, and
Joyce
Hanchett. The
1946 cheer
leaders
included Ray
Rasberry,
Wanda Jo
Vinson, Joyce
Beakes, and
John Willey.60
The 1947
faculty was
almost
identical with
that of the
previous year,
as follows: C.
A. Mathews,
superintendent;
C. R. Miller,
principal; J.
L. Badgett
(band); Allie
Bland
(mathematics);
Mrs. M. L.
Bradley
(commercial);
Charles Ecles
(Spanish);
Frances Earle
(history);
Gladys Estes
(English II);
Mrs. M. L.
Fore (English
3, 4); Baron
Gray (coach);
Edna Holder
(commercial);
Martha Bennett
(girls’
phys-ed); R.
O. Medlin
(mathematics);
Marjorie
Newsom (home
ec); Mrs. E.
G. Peterson
(English 1);
Jessie Lee
Ross
(science); T.
E. Smith
(mathematics);
Mrs. C. C.
Swanson
(librarian);
Fount Wade
(science,
asst. coach);
and Mrs.
Beatrice Davis
(commercial).
The
1947
graduating
class was back
up to 68, an
increase from
55 in 1946.
The graduates
included Ruth
Aldredge,
Louise Bevil,
Alta Gray
Block, Goldie
Lou Bonsall,
Lessie James
Broussard,
Willie Mae
Broussard,
Katherine
Bryan, Carl
Bush, David
Bush, Nell
Camp, L. G.
Chaddick,
Howard Clark,
Sarah Jane
Fox, Curtis
Gough, Irene
Greer, Robert
Harbour, Leon
Hastings, Rena
Huval, Jane
Johnson, Jewel
Jones, James
Kingston,
Nancy
Lawrence,
Jackie Little,
Gene
McCartney,
Betty Markham,
Barbara
Matherne,
Betty Jo
Matte, Mary
Sue Merritt,
Mary Collins (became
nationally
known
New York model
and TV actress
Ca. 1950,
see
Midc.
Chronicle,
July
25,1990)
, Bill Crane,
Earline
Eagleson,
Leroy Farley,
Eugene
Findley,
Charles Ray
Fletcher,
Harrell
Fowler,
Marjorie
Fowler,
William C.
Mize, Jim
Newberry,
Harold Gene
Palmer, and O.
R. Perdue.
Also, Lettye
Layne Peveto,
Lois Lee
Pregeant,
Robert Quinn,
Joyce Rackley,
Faye Root,
Cecil Rose,
Donald
Sanderson,
Everett
Sanderson, Joy
Elaine
Sandlin,
Harold Sarles,
Elvis
Saulters,
Jerry Shuart,
Beverly Rachel
Stewart,
Billie
Swearingen,
Betty Taylor,
Trice Edgar
Taylor,
Charles
Tippen, Wanda
Jo Vinson,
Billy Whitman,
and Bobby
Whitman.
On Nov. 20,
1946 the
Kampus Klub
presented the
3-act play
“The Lady in
Gray.” The
Senior Class
presented the
play “Laughing
Gas,” date not
stated.
In 1947 the
girls’
basketball
team players
included Joyce
Chambers,
Shirley Dean,
Goldie
Bonsall,
Earline
Eagleson, Inge
Jordahn,
Beverly
Haynes,
Delores
Babineaux,
Rita Faye
Melder, Mary
Kingston,
Dorothy
Langham,
Bobbie Harris,
Ida Mae
Langham, Ms.
Bennett, Edith
Woods, and
Betty Miller.
The 1947
Bulldogs
football team
included James
Fultz, Trice
Taylor, Elvis
Saulters,
Howard Clark,
Harold Palmer,
Leroy Farley,
Cecil Rose,
Donald
Sanderson, O.
R. Perdue, Leo
Schion, L. C.
Choate, Tyrus
Sibley, David
Bush, Jerry
Locke, Robert
Harbour, Bobby
Wooten,
Everett
Sanderson,
Darrel Monts,
William
Johnson, Bill
Crane, L. G.
Chaddick, Lynn
Price, Harold
Zimmerman, Joe
Wayne Dubose,
Buddy Davis,
and Jimmy
Locke.
The
boys’
basketball
team included
Bobby Wooten,
Howard Clark,
Buddy Davis,
Everett
Sanderson, Jim
Newberry,
Robert
Harbour, Ollie
Ray Fuller,
Elvis
Saulters, Gene
Palmer, Trice
Taylor, Joe
Wayne Dubose,
and L. G.
Chaddick.
Chaddick and
Davis made
All-District,
each having a
scoring record
of 156 points.
Later, Davis
would become
an Olympic
winner.61
The Nederland
Board of
Education in
1950 included
John McInnis,
president; Dr.
B. H. Hall, B.
A. Ritter, J.
V. Radford,
Murray
Libersat, E.
A. Palmer, and
W. F.
Ricketts. The
faculty of
that year
included C. A.
Mathews,
superintendent;
F. C. Burnett,
principal; E.
C. Deering,
supervisor;
also, Mrs.
B. B. Bolton
(Spanish,
history), Mrs.
M. L. Bradley
(commercial),
Emmett
McKenzie
(physics). R.
O. Medlin
(math). Walter
Deering (world
history), Mrs.
Julia Dupuy
(nurse),
Frances Earle
(history),
Charles Enloe
(band),
Marjorie
Newsom (home
ec), Mrs. A.
E. Paradice
(bookkeeping),
Elbert Pickell
(coach), Harry
Gerbens
(industrial
arts). Louise
Hogg
(dietician),
Mrs. R. L.
LaBove
(choral), L.
C. Lowery
(asst. coach,
math), Mrs. J.
D. Presley
(girls’
phys-ed),
Jessie Ross
(science),
Mrs. Syd
Russell
(English),
Mrs. A. H.
Smith
(English,
history), Mrs.
Daisy Swanson
(librarian),
J. W. Welch
(typing,
chemistry), H.
S. Whiteside
(math), Mrs.
H. S.
Whiteside
(English,
speech), and
Charles
Williams
(English). The
writer will
use this space
to recognize
the 21-year
Nederland
teaching
career of
Frances Earle
and Marjorie
Newson, each
of whom was
dearly beloved
by the student
body.
In 1950 senior
class included
90 graduates,
as follows:
Revis Abshire,
Billy Jack
Abshire,
Juanita
Adamson, Bobby
Aldredge, May
Nell
Armstrong,
Sadie Ruth
Baker, Darold
Bartels,
Donald
Bartels,
Johnny Bevil,
Melba Ruth
Beyer, James
Bolton, Davis
Bourque,
Carolyn
Brackin,
Thomas
Burnaman, A.
J. Cessac,
Freddy Cessac,
Arthur
Champagne,
Barbara
Courts, Jack
Childress,
Ethel Courts,
Billie Ferrel
Dalby, Patsy
Daughrity,
Arlen Daw,
Jeanne Deese,
Benny
Driggers,
Betty Lou
Dubose, Betty
Eagleson,
Florence
Foster, Mary
Fowler, and
Martha Bert
Fox.
Also, Ruth
Frederick,
Leonard
Frazier, Pat
Furth, J. T.
Gall, Jimmie
Nell Gaugh,
Billy Guzardo,
Arlene
Handley, Jerry
Hanks, Shirley
Hastings,
Belvin Havard,
John Haizlip,
Joann
Henderson,
Maxine
Jennings,
Billy Johnson,
Dorothy
Langham,
Gladys
LaPoint, Hazel
LaPoint, Julia
LeBlanc,
Billie Rae
Lewis, Richard
Longbottom,
Elton Luce,
Louise
McBride, Jack
McGaffey,
William McGee,
Robert
Marcontel,
Dorothy May,
Marion
Mericle,
Marguerite
Miller, Alvin
Mott, Keith
Norton, George
O’Quinn,
Darald
Premeaux, Bud
Rauwerda,
Wilma
Rauwerda,
Clara Lela
Redditt, and
Joyce
Rienstra.
Also, Delores
Richardson,
Gene Shaw,
Arnold Sherer,
Bessie
Silkwood,
Andrew
Simmons,
Gerald Smith,
Patsy Stark,
Rebecca
Street, Cleo
Strickland,
Mary Thacker,
Samuel Tobey,
Jo Ann Tyer,
Nelis Van
Marion, Bobby
Watson, D. C.
West, Donnie
Whitehead,
Bobbie
Whitehead, F.
A. Wiegmann,
Curtis
Williams,
Damie Whitman,
H. C. Youmans,
Roberta Greer,
and Ray
Rasberry.
The many
extracurricular
groups worthy
of mention
included the
Future
Homemakers,
Campus Club,
Spanish Club,
Speech Club,
Choral Club,
Student
Council,
Health
Council, Press
Club, Science
Club, and Pep
Squad. There
were several
dramatic plays
presented
during the
year.
The
1949 track
team included
Richard
Longbottom,
Walter Robin,
Davis Bourque,
Revis Abshire,
Dal Ray Brown,
James Lee,
Curtis
Williams Bill
Sturrock, Bud
Rauwerda, D.
C. West, and
Darald
Premeaux.62
This completes
a thumbnail
sketch of
early
Nederland
education and
a brief
history of the
Nederland
Independent
School
District from
1898 until
1950. Many
annuals or
Pilot books
are not on
hand in the
school
archives, and
even if they
had been
available, the
length of this
treatise would
have become
unmanageable
if each year
had been
presented. And
the writer
truly regrets
that he could
not mention
each
graduate’s
name from
every
graduating
class. Some
Nederland
graduates won
national
acclaim, among
them Bobby
Vinson,
All-American
at West Point,
who is still
missing in
action in
Vietnam;
Arleigh Duff,
western
singer, whose
“You All Come”
made top ten
of Western
music; Buddy
Davis, who won
an Olympic
gold medal;
and Mary
Collins, of
New York model
and TV fame.
Tex Ritter
attended
school briefly
in Nederland
before leaving
for Hollywood.
It would be
easy to point
out in 2004
that the
Nederland
School
District can
boast of a
high school, 2
middle
schools, and 4
elementary
school; a
large capacity
football
stadium, an
administration
building, band
houses,
libraries,
computers, and
a dozen other
scholastic and
administrative
aids which are
needed to make
its cylinders
run smoothly.
However, as
always it is
its large
faculty and
student body,
which are
worthy of
writing about.
It is the
author’s
sincere wish
that this
scholastic
entity will
continue to
succeed for
centuries to
come, and
always leave
as excellent
an academic
record in
the future as
it has in the
past.
Endnotes
1
W.
T. Block,
“Tulip
Transplants to
East Texas:
The Dutch
Migration to
Nederland,
Port Arthur,
and Winnie,
1895-1915,”
East Texas
Historical
Journal, XIII,
No. 2 (1975),
36-50.
2
Holland,
Mich.
DeGrondwet,
May 24, 1898.
3
Midcounty
Chronicle,
July 22, 1992.
4
Memories
of Anna Cooley
in “From the
Netherlands in
Europe to
Nederland,
Texas.”
5
Histories
of the Elings,
Koelemay and
Westerterp
families.
6
History
of the John
Berthold
Cooke, Sr.
family.
7
Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee,
1898-1973, p.
45.
8
Ibid,
p. 47.
9
History
of the
Thompson
family.
10
Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.47
and other
sources.
11
History
of the W. S.
Gibson family,
Vol. 5, Part
A, “Chronicles
of the Early
Families of
Nederland.”
12
Beaumont
Enterprise,
.May 24, 1908.
13
Beaumont
Journal, Apr.
2, 15, 1905.
14
Ibid.,
May 21, 1905.
15
Beaumont
Enterprise,
May 26, 1907.
16
Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.
49.
17
Part
X, Memoirs of
Carrie
Goodwin, in
“Chronicles of
the Early
Families of
Nederland.”
18
Memoirs
of Annie Marie
McLean, Vol.
4, Part 5,
“Chronicles of
the Early
Families.”
19
Beaumont
Enterprise,
Sept. 10,
1911.
20
Ibid.,
May 19, 1912.
21
School
Review of
Jefferson
County Texas
for 1921,
pp.14, 50.
22
Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.
50.
23
Ibid.,
p. 49.
24
“School
Review of
Jefferson
County, Texas
for 1921,” p.
49.
25
Ibid.,
p. 13.
26
Ibid.,
p. 50.
27
Ibid.,
p. 101.
28
Ibid.,
pp. 19-20.
29 Ibid.,
p. 51.
30 Ibid.,
“Jefferson
County Health
Department,”
pp. 97-101.
31 Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.
50.
32 Part
U, Memoirs of
Lowell C.
Morgan, in
“Chronicles of
the Early
Families of
Nederland.”
33 Part
C, Vol. 2,
Memoirs of
Adam Winters,
in “Chronicles
of the Early
Families etc.”
34 “Nederland
New School to
be Ready,”
Beaumont
Enterprise,
August 12, 24,
1924; also the
1928 Pilot, p.
16.
35 Memoirs
of Annie Marie
McLean, Vol.
4, Part 5,
“Chronicles of
the Early
Families etc.”
36 Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.
54; W. T.
Block, “C. O.
Wilson:
Nederland’s
Pioneer
Educator,”
Midcounty
Chronicle,
April 17,
2002.
37 Interview,
W. T. Block
with Albert H.
Rienstra, Dec.
8, 2004.
38 Interview,
W. T. Block
with Mrs.
Alice Ruth
Bodemuller,
Dec. 8, 2004.
39 See
Nederland
Diamond
Jubilee, p.
51; also
Nederland
Centennial
History, p.
121.
40 Nederland
Centennial
History, p.
64.
41 Ibid.
42 W.
T. Block, “C.
O. Wilson:
Midcounty’s
Pioneer
Educator,”
Midcounty
Chronicle,
Apr. 17, 2002.
42a The
1928 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
42b The
1929 annual,
The Pilot,
pages 19-81.
43 The
1930 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
44 Ibid.
45 The
1937 annual,
The Announcer,
p. 4.
46 See
footnote 43.
47 Ibid.
48 Ibid.
49 Ibid
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid.
52 The
1934 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
53 Ibid.
54
The
1937 annual,
The Announcer,
pages
unnumbered.
55 Ibid.
56 Ibid.
57 Ibid;
also Nederland
Centennial
History, pp.
67-69.
58 The
1941 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
59 The
1942 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
60 The
1946 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
61 The
1947 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
62 The
1950 annual,
The Pilot,
pages
unnumbered.
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