| |
Steel production boomed during
World War I, and as the United States entered the war in 1917,
the school bell was moved to a new five-room brick building erected
next to the frame building. The brick building had classrooms, a home economics
department, and a cafeteria, combined with an auditorium. “We
were so thrilled because we were going to get to go into the new
building,” Thelma Thornquist remembered. When it opened,
the school was already overcrowded, and portables were erected during
the war. The teaching staff grew to eleven, including a kindergarten
teacher.
Youngstown’s classrooms reflected the immigration of Europeans
to the U.S. in the early 20th century and the movement of immigrant
families from the Midwest. Croatians, Yugoslavians, Greek,
Irish, Germans, Austrians, and Hungarians settled into Riverside. Scandinavians
like the Thornquists settled on Pigeon Hill. Thornquist began
school speaking better Swedish than English. John Hendron,
who lived two blocks up the hill from the school, remembers nine
different Olson families within three blocks.
Italians like the Lucchesini’s and Valentinetti’s
settled in the valley. (Nichols) There
were also Greek, French, Austrian, Sicilian, and Russian families. Ariadne
Morris came to Youngstown with her family in 1923 after the Russian
Revolution: “We lived near the steel mill in a very small
home, part of which had been built from old wooden crates. There
were other Russian families around, like the Dubecks. Because
we didn’t have a car, we often socialized with them in our
home… I guess you could say we maintained a Russian lifestyle,
spoke only Russian and often ate Russian soups…” (1)
Assimilating children of immigrants to the American
culture was a mission of the Seattle School District under the
leadership of Superintendent Frank B. Cooper. Cooper adopted
a progressive approach to education which became known as The Seattle
Way. It
emphasized character development and the values of democracy, patriotism,
obedience, hard work, and civic responsibility as well as use of
the English language. (2) Elementary
schools were laboratories for democracy, and moral instruction was
integral to teaching.
Youngstown School took those values to heart. Holiday
programs and assemblies reflected the dominant American culture and
the Christian religion. Christmas and Easter were both observed
in school. For
the Christmas pageant, the school kids would put on their clothing
from different countries; “we would have a parade, everybody
in their own country’s clothes with a gift for the child to
take onto the stage” explained Georgia Baxter. The
minister of University Christian Church gave the address during the
Book Week assembly in the 1920’s, a celebration that featured
Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer, Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women,
Robinson Crusoe, Little Bo Peep, Little Black Sambo, and Little Boy
Blue.
The school gave equal time to pagan holidays,
too, like Halloween and May Day. Many alumni remember Maypole dances and
the crowning of May Day kings and queens. Mary Alice Fort Willi
and Gino Lucchesini were king and queen in the 1920’s; the
dance was in the playfield across 24th from the school.
Patriotism was taught through holidays, like
Washington’s
and Lincoln’s birthdays and Memorial Day. In 1915, during
World War I, the school board instituted flag saluting, and thereafter
the school day always began with a flag salute. For more than
20 years after the war ended, Armistice Day was celebrated with a
moment of silence. “Patriotism permeated life in Seattle
schools during the first four decades of the twentieth century,” writes
historian Doris Pieroth, “even more so in schools with large
immigrant populations. Making good, loyal citizens of all children
remained a primary goal.” (3)
The school educated the whole child with a learning-by-doing
approach. Domestic
science, manual training, and gardening were part of the curriculum. The
wooden school had a 15-foot square vegetable garden protected by
netting. Students worked in the garden “to teach us about
home gardening” (Schwartz).
Many of the students already knew these practical
arts. Baxter’s
father kept a vegetable garden, had fruit trees in the backyard,
and got fish from the Sound. “That’s how we survived.”
Mary Alice Fort Willi recalls that her widowed
grandmother grew and sold raspberries to supplement her income
running a boarding house for mill workers. “She had a big field of raspberries. And
she would pick the raspberriesand take them down
to the local grocery store…. They would allow her so much
money for her berries toward her food. That was her way of
making a living.” She also remembered an elderly couple
who owned a cow, a daily source of milk. “Every once
in awhile he [Grandpa Taif, she called him] would let me come in
the barn and watch him milk the cow. He’d plant me there
and tell me to open my mouth. And he’d squirt the milk right
in my mouth.” 
Parts of the hands-on curriculum
were separated by gender. When
they got to the sixth or seventh grades, the boys did manual training,
and the girls took a half semester of cooking or sewing. (Ackerlund
and Nichols) As
part of their schoolwork, girls made the dresses they wore for
the eighth-grade graduation photos. But Aurora Valentinetti
remembers that Cooper was quite innovative because the boys took
cooking and sewing, too. “We cooked for each other. And
they had to sew, too. They learned how to set the table… and
the girls took shop.” Baxter says the school experimented
with letting the girls take wood construction but dropped it after
a year.
“We learned to work hard, to be responsible for
our actions,” recalls Valentinetti. “I think a
lot of it had to do because we were such a mixed ethnic group there. These
were all people who had come from dire poverty. They came here
to get a better life. They really were patriotic…. They
wanted to succeed.” 
1. Gail Dubrow and Alexa Berlow. Delridge
Community History. (Seattle Dept. of Parks and Recreation,
1994) 13. 2. Pieroth, Doris Hinson. Seattle’s
Women Teachers of the Interwar Years. (Seattle and London:
U. of Wa. Pr., 2004) 5, 22.
3. Pieroth, 136, 139.
|
|