Mid-1930s Sailor graduates to reunite
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DON CANTRELL
Newport Harbor High alumni are prepared to establish another rare
class reunion event this summer as plans have been announced for the
69- and 70-year reunions of the Classes of 1935 and ‘34, according to
spokeman Woodrow Hadley (Class of ‘34).
Hadley and wife Berenice are charting a potato salad bar lunch at
11:30 a.m. Satureday at their Costa Mesa home -- 345 Broadway.
Hadley said they have already received 14 personal responses and
that the list could approach about 30 before Tuesday’s reservation
deadline.
Hadley, a Navy veteran and a former Newport gridder in the
mid-1930s, can be reached at (949) 548-5288.
Harbor High opened in 1930 with no senior class and did not field
a varsity football team until the fall of 1931. The first varsity
unit was coached by Ralph Reed, the school’s first athletic director.
Reed coached football for seven years before Dick Spaulding took
charge in 1938-39. He was followed by Wendell Pickens in 1940-42 and
again in 1946-47. Pickens’ 1942 team won the school’s first football
championship.
Hadley was delighted to disclose that at least 11 former gridders
from the early ‘30s, and two from the early ‘40s, are expected to
attend.
The list reveals some proud names from the early days, like Al
Irwin (Class of ‘36), who returned to coach varsity football at
Newport from 1948 through 1955, before advancing to Orange Coast
College in 1956 and leading the Pirates to the conference
championship.
In addition, the list features the McClellan brothers, Rollo and
Sparks. Rollo, who set the school’s 100-yard dash record at 10.2
seconds in 1938, was the star fullback for the 1937 varsity team,
while Sparks was the center for the 1939 grid club.
Other notable gridders were Malchom Reid, Jerry Keithley, Howard
Grebe, Bryon Marshall, Jack McNally, Charles Buckland and varsity
manager Daren McGavren, who was also a star pole vaulter.
Also expected is Reid’s son, Broug, who played on the 1956 Sailor
grid team.
The McClellan brothers later played ball at Fullerton Junior
College, before they were prompted to leave for military service
during World War II.
Irwin and Keithley linked up again at the College of the Pacific
in Stockton and were later joined by Newport’s fine 1936 wingman Walt
Kelly.
Buckland, a stout defensive player on the 1939 team, later established sterling marks in work for the Los Angeles Police
Department.
*
This corner wishes to correct an error in the May 31 tribute to
one World War II veteran from Newport. His name is Glenn O. Thompson,
the 1937 quarterback. We erred by listing his first name as George.
Thompson, who died a few years back, advanced to rear admiral in
the Coast Guard during WWII.
Incidentally, a few top names were overlooked in the WWII tribute
on May 31. It should have included Pickens, a Navy officer who
drilled midshipmen on physical training.
Also omitted were: John Owens, a one-time line coach at Orange
Coast College, who had served in the SeaBees; Paul Myrehn, who
starred on the 1942 championship team and was an Army officer; Ralph
Irwin, a top Newport lineman in the mid-1930s, who served in the
Coast Guard; and Zeller Robertson, a 1940 Tar gridder, who later
became a captain and labored with the Army foreign language
assignment at Fort Ord.
*
Interesting to note that “Woody” Hadley can still remember his two
Bee grid coaches in 1933. They were Bill Brown and Ken Crane. Brown
may have been a former Newport athlete of note.
If Hadley had still been around in 1936, he could have joined
Rollo McClellan and Glenn O. Thompson on a championship Bee football
team. It marked Newport’s first grid title and the team was coached
by Lee Trine, a former grid chief at the University of Redlands.
Hadley served four years in the Navy and would have continued on
into World War II, but he developed lung trouble in 1939 and had to
retire from the Navy.
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