Waterlogged capsule tells of time past
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Angelique Flores
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- A water-filled time capsule was opened with a stream
of disappointment at Fountain Valley Elementary School on Saturday.
When the school closed a decade ago, items were stored in a fireproof
safe, sealed with a silicone seal, doubly enclosed in a plastic bag and
covered with a plastic tray and 3 inches of concrete.
Firefighters pried open the door only to find that water had already made
its way inside and damaged everything.
“There was a collective sigh of ‘oh’ and a collective sense of closure,”
said Sandra Crandall, who taught kindergarten at the school for 20 years.
About 125 former students, staff and parents attended the event, anxious
to find out what was in the capsule. The remains include a discolored
T-shirt with the school’s motto “The sky’s the limit,” a stained
“Fountain Valley Trojans” pennant, a soggy book of “Charlotte’s Web,” a
wad of students’ reports, a soaked computer disk, faded pictures and
school Olympic ribbons, a Student Safety Committee button and a wet
newspaper article about the school’s closing.
“Everything is all stained and ugly,” said Larry Crandall, Sandra’s
husband and the Fountain Valley councilman who organized the event.
Sandra Crandall washed the items but said she had no luck getting the
mold and goo off of the items.
“We can’t put anything on display in the library. It would stink up the
joint,” Larry Crandall said.
Despite the disappointment, those in attendance still enjoyed reminiscing
with old friends. Former students, now between 15 and 21 years old,
returned for the opening -- coming from as far away as Los Angeles,
Fallbrook and San Clemente.
“I hadn’t been on campus since third grade,” Jenny Black said. Now 19,
Black was a third-grader when the school closed. “The ceremony was held
where we used to eat lunch, and I could still picture the picnic tables
there.”
Teachers and parents enjoyed seeing how the students have grown.
“There was this little curly headed fellow I taught in kindergarten, and
now he towers over me,” Sandra Crandall said.
Plans are in the works for the school to be turned into a senior center
and senior housing.
“Now the site will serve not the young but the old,” she said.
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