Girls Volleyball New NorCal Champs, Place Second in State Championship

This story was originally posted online in December 2007

In a tremendous run at the championship, our girls varsity volleyball team, supported by a huge number of students, family and friends, made it to the championship match, but were shut down Saturday afternoon by Santa Fe Valley Christian of Solana, in three straight games. The team repeatedly broke school records as they progressed from Central Coast Section (CCS) playoffs, taking second place, to the Northern California (NorCal) playoff series, where they won the NorCal championship against Christian Brothers of Sacramento. The girls then played in the Division IV State Championship, December 1 at San Jose State University. It was a historical first to make it to the finals to begin with and our fans were so supportive and positive throughout the season that Harker was awarded the prestigious Steve Stearns Sportsmanship Award from the CCS for our out-of-this-world fan representation. Coach Theresa Smith said, “This season has been the most incredible experience for our players, our coaches and our school. I am proud of all of us for what we’ve accomplished.”

Additional news coverage can be found here:

San Jose Mercury News, Dec. 2, 2007

Ca. Interscholastic Federation

Mercury News, Oct. 12, 2007 by Dennis Knight: Harker Coach Sets Up Players To Win

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Harker Softball Player Named All-Star

After a historic season, Harker’s girls softball team picked up another honor this season when they had a player named to the San Jose Mercury News’ all-star roster. Alison Rugar, a sophomore, was named to the roster for her outstanding performance this year as a pitcher. She pitched 10 strikeouts against Notre Dame and consistently brought energy and enthusiasm for the game to the team.

Harker softball has been recognized for team and individual excellence and this season took its performances to new heights – it qualified for the Central Coast Section softball tournament for the first time in its history. We congratulate Rugar and the team on their accomplishments, and are looking forward to watching them capitalize on this momentum next season.

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Historical Alumnae Connections

The following story originally appeared in the June 2003 issue of Harker News.

The Archives learned of two noteworthy Miss Harker’s School alumnae as a result of inquiries from researchers!

Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher
In January an Illinois professor writing a biography of Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher, Miss Harker’s School Class of 1926, contacted us to confirm details of MFK Fisher’s schooling at Miss Harker’s. MFK Fisher (1908-1994) authored over 30 books about food and was a colleague of Julia Child’s. Harker archivist Sue Smith located Fisher’s transcripts, information about her younger sister who also attended Miss Harker’s, and general information about the curriculum at the time. In return, we received an 8×10 photo of Mary Frances (center student in photo above) with her graduating class taken on the lawn of Miss Harker’s School, which will be hung, along with a growing number of other historic photos, in the main conference room on the Saratoga campus.

Margaret Robertson Sperry
In February another inquiry came in a most unusual way. Marcie Gilbert’s fourth grade class completed a Web-based project on Armstrong Sperry, winning Newbery author (“Call it Courage,” 1941). His granddaughter, Margo Burns, who lives in Manchester, N.H., manages Sperry’s website. She noticed the “hits” from the Harker class and remembered that her grandmother, Margaret Robertson Sperry (Class of 1917), had attended Miss Harker’s School in California. She immediately went to our website and upon contacting the archives department, was thrilled that they could provide her with her grandmother’s transcripts and copies of the school brochures from that era. In return, the archives received a digital photo of Robertson and Sperry, together in Hawaii in the late 1920s.

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LS and MS Robotics Teams Going to Championships

This story was originally posted online in early 2009.

Students from fifth through eighth grades have qualified for world and national championships in two robotics contests. Congratulations to grade 8 students Sierra Lincoln, Pooja Shah and Sonia Gupta, who took the First Place Championship Award and the Judges Award at a regional VEX Robotics competition at Bellarmine College Preparatory in mid-January. The team will head to Dallas in May for the world championship competition. VEX robotics matches are played with robots made from VEX Robotics kits, designed for use in competitions by schools. Four robots work in two teams on a 12-foot square field to manage tasks, thwart opponents and hold dominant points on the field.

December was a great month for students participating in the First Lego League (FLL) robotics tournaments. In early December, a trio of Harker grade 8 boys won the special Community Award at the QuixSilver FIRST Lego League competition in early December as well as finishing second overall in the Robot Performance segment of the event. The team, Batteries Not Included, is Michael Cheng, Ravi Tadinada and Tyler Yeats. Their success allowed them to advance to the Northern California FLL Championship competition in late January.

In mid-December, Harker’s all-girl GEARs team – Eva Bruketa, Cristina Jerney, Cecilia Lang-Ree and Payal Modi, all grade 8 – participated in their final tournament at Valley Christian School, receiving the Judge’s Award for their efforts and successes in the years they competed. The GEARs were the only all-girl team to compete for all five years in the league, which is open to competitors from ages 9 to 14. And in the true spirit of Harker’s technologicial prowess, Bruketa, who left Harker last year for a new home in Ottawa, Canada, communicated with the rest of her team using Skype, the Webcam service that allows real-time conversations via computer. She had a mock Lego model set up in her home, and she and her teammates designed their project long-distance. Bruketa did come down for the final tournament to join in the fun with her friends.

The SAP elementals – Jeremy Binkley, Jeton Gutierrez-Bujari, Alexander Thomas and Harry Xu, all grade 6 – advanced to the Northern California State Championship after competing at a regional tournament at Hopkins Junior High School in Fremont in mid-December.

LS students also performed well at regional FLL tournaments in December. The RoboFerrets, grade 5 students John Nicolas Jerney, Alec Kiang, Ryan Lee and Robbie Underwood, received the Research Award at a regional tournament at California High School in San Ramon on Dec. 14, and advanced to the Northern California State Championship.

Elizabeth Siegel, grade 5, and her team, Claws2008 Robotics, were the winners of the Robot Design award and placed second overall at a regional tournament at Valley Christian High School on Dec. 13.

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Harker Conservatory Performs at 2007 Fringe Festival, Scotland

The cast and crew of last year’s spring musical attended the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August, and all expectations of the trip were met and exceeded. As members of the American High School Theatre Festival (AHSTF), the troupe was on a “working trip,” doing four performances in the beautiful Church Hill Theatre, and attending four performances by other high school participants. They also had one half-hour slot allotted to them on the Royal Mile, the main street of Edinburgh, to sell their show to the public, which they did in high spirits despite pouring rain. Director Laura Lang-Ree brought water bottles, in a bright yellow, to advertise the show, which the cast freely handed out to passersby during the first week. It was always a fun surprise to spot a “Urinetown” water bottle in the hand, basket or backpack of a tourist!

The high schools performing at the Fringe are advertised and billed exactly the same as all other professional and amateur groups, so schools hope to attract theatergoers, and not just other high school students. Thus it was especially gratifying that “Urinetown” had an audience of almost 150 for the first performance. In all, they had among the highest attendance of the high schools, performing for 430 people. “The Conservatory’s recognition by AHSTF was incredibly valuable to our program, ranking us among the best and brightest of high school musical theater,” said Lang-Ree. “Being able to take our students on a trip like this, one that demanded the best of them as performers, ‘sales-people’ and ambassadors of Harker was just magic.”

AHSTF sponsored a ceilidh (a traditional Scottish dance) for the students, where dancers in traditional attire demonstrated various dances and then pulled in the students and adults to give it a try. The students also attended the Edinburgh Military Tattoo, an annual celebration of the military history of the United Kingdom, and were taken on a day-long coach ride through the Trossachs (“Little Highlands”) to Stirling Castle.

When not rehearsing or performing “Urinetown,” the 31 Harker students were busy gaining valuable theater experience by attending as many professional shows as possible. They saw actor Alan Cumming in a very modern “The Bacchae,” two comedians summarizing the first six Harry Potter books in an hour, Cambridge University’s “Sweeney Todd” in the tiniest of venues, a hip hop version of “Into the Woods,” two tappers dancing to two classical guitars, and much, much more. Of course, some shopping was done, despite the prohibitive exchange rate, and much hot chocolate was drunk at the cafe; “Chocolate Soup,” a student (and chaperone) favorite.

Harker’s Conservatory attended the Fringe after being nominated by American Musical Theatre of San Jose and undergoing an intensive application process. Thirty-eight of the approximately 300 schools that applied were invited to attend the Fringe this year.

“I am so grateful to the administration and the Conservatory families for their constant support. I hope to be able to take another lucky cast to the Fringe sometime in the future!” added Lang-Ree.

The blog from the trip can be found at: http://urinetownfringe.blogspot.com/

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Harker Archives Moves to Bucknall Campus

This story originally appeared in the June 2003 issue of Harker News

Over forty boxes of documents, artifacts, memorabilia and framed photographs found a new home on the Bucknall campus with the official move of the Harker archives to the Bucknall library in April.

The Harker Archives Project began in the summer of 2002, but quickly outgrew the small space in the Saratoga Library office. Now located in the office area in the Bucknall Library, archivist Sue Smith continues to collect and organize items from the school’s past, as well as to write Finding Aids, the scholarly documents created to describe an archive’s holdings. Smith notes, “We have some wonderful treasures in the Harker Archives. Our holdings are unique, and many are irreplaceable. They are truly our windows into our past.”

In addition to compiling school history, the Archives catalogs the documents and memorabilia and produces articles for the Harker News and the history section of the Harker Web site. Smith asks that If you are willing to part with a piece of (or copy of!) your personal “Harker history,” the Archives would appreciate your yearbooks, uniforms, photos, student work or other memorabilia from Palo Alto Military Academy, Miss Harker’s School, The Harker Day School and Harker Academy. Contact Sue Smith, Harker archivist, at susans@harker.org to discuss sharing your treasures!

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More from the Harker Archives

This story by Enid Davis, lower school librarian, originally appeared in the January and February 2002 issues of Harker News

Frank Cramer (1862-1948): Earliest Founder of The Harker School

Frank Cramer was born in Wausau, Wis. He was one of Palo Alto’s first residents and played a strong leadership role in both the city government and local public schools. I’m sure Diana Nichols would have found his company lively as Cramer had a lifelong interest in the natural sciences and was a biologist.

Frank Cramer graduated from Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis., in 1886, taught for a while and came to Palo Alto in 1891 to attend Stanford University. He studied zoology, earning a master’s degree in 1893.

What better training to open up a school? Under the influence of David Starr Jordan, president of Stanford University, Cramer opened Manzanita Hall, a college prep school for boys in 1893. Twenty-four boys were enrolled there in September 1894.

When Cramer opened the school, Palo Alto was not the bustling, expensive community it is today. But it was growing. According to Arthur Coffman’s history of Palo Alto: “From 1890 to 1894 the number of buildings in Palo Alto increased from 6 to 165. During the same four years, the population rose from 12 to 700.”

In terms of real estate prices, Coffman reports “a six-room cottage was built for $1,500; a ten-room house for $3,300; and a twelve-room house for $4,500.”

Sources:
Blitzer, Carol. http://www.service.com/paw/Centennial/1994 Apr 15. 1890SC.html
Coffman, Arthur. An Illustrated History of Palo Alto. Palo Alto: Osborne, 1969.
Palo Alto City Library. Obituary Files.

Frank and Archie – Harker Heroes from the Past

We all know about the Harker eagle, our school’s mascot, but have you heard the tale about Archie, the “knee-sprung horse,” who belonged to Frank Cramer, one of the founders of The Harker School?

Frank Cramer, who founded Manzanita Hall in 1893, was very much involved in Palo Alto’s relief effort for San Franciscans after the 1906 earthquake. He and his faithful Archie would go back and forth from the train station delivering yeast and flour from San Jose to bakers in the Palo Alto area, and back again to the station with the loaves.

In one incident Cramer heard that Duff & Doyles’ store in Menlo Park was offering lots of yeast for the cause. He hitched old Archie to a 600-pound wagon, imagining himself the hero of the day when he would deliver at least 50 pounds of yeast to cheering bakers. Instead, he received a tiny package from a worker, who insisted that they were dispersing one small box to each family.

“My dream of valiant service was shattered,” reported Cramer. “But I took the dainty box of yeast cakes. On the way back I wondered, if rumor can do that kind of thing traveling only a mile and a half, what could it do going once or twice around the world?”

According to reports, “Mr. Frank Cramer furnished his horse and express wagon and worked himself untiringly, or at least ceaselessly, from early morn till late at night, receiving, checking, counting, and delivering at the station the finished product, amounting to several loaves of bread daily. His good grey horse may well be counted among the earthquake sufferers.”

Sources: Dick, Linda. Palo Alto: 1906. Foothill College District, N.D. p.14.

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The Harker School History Flash Cards

This story by Enid Davis, lower school librarian, originally appeared in the November 2002 issue of Harker News.

While going through our boxes of unsorted archive treasures, San Jose State University intern Sue Smith found a band of flashcards typed on small index cards. They contain names and facts about important people in the early history of The Harker School. Here are some founding fathers and mothers of Manzanita Hall, later to be called Palo Alto Military Academy (1919-1972), The Harker Academy (1972-1992) and finally, The Harker School (1992-present).

A Baker’s Dozen: Who are These People?

1. David Starr Jordan
2. Frank Cramer
3. Rev. W.D. Bishop
4. E.L. Rich
5. Dr. Ben Thomas
6. George B. Culver
7. J. Le Roy Dixon

Answers:
1. Jordan was the first president of Stanford University. He inspired Frank Cramer and Catherine Harker to open their two schools. Jordan was a botonist and an ichthyologist.

2. Cramer was a Palo Alto town trustee, trustee of the first Palo Alto public school, and founder, owner, and first principal of Manzanita Hall.

3. Bishop’s house on Waverley Street at University Avenue in Palo Alto was the first site of Cramer’s school.

4. Rich was one of the first teachers at Cramer’s school. He was a Presbyterian minister and husband of one of the two original
teachers in the Palo Alto School District, 1893.

5. Thomas was a dentist who taught at Manzanita Hall in 1896; he graduated from Stanford in 1897.

6. Culver taught at Manzanita Hall in 1896; he was dean of men at Stanford University, 1920-1928.

7. Dixon bought out Cramer in 1902 and ran the school for 10 years. He later sold the school to W.A. Shedd who later resold it to him.

8. Shedd was headmaster of Manzanita Hall in 1909. He bought the school in 1912 from Dixon and later resold it to him.

9. Kelly was also one of four Los Angeleans who bought Manzanita Hall from Dixon in 1919.

10. Emery was also one of four Los Angeleans who bought Manzanita Hall from Dixon. He left after one year to found Seale Academy.

11. Monroe was also one of four Los Angeleans who bought Manzanita Hall from Dixon. She served as housemother and later married Dr. Emery.

12. Hanson was one of four Los Angeleans to purchase Manzanita Hall from Dixon in June 1919. They spent 32 years operating the school’s summer camp, Camp El Dorado.

13. Park was commandant of Manzanita Hall from 1922-1925. He left to start the Pacific Coast Military Academy.

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Otelia Winchell Cullen Polk De Witt

This story by Enid Davis, lower school librarian, originally appeared in the April 2002 issue of Harker News

The women who put the “Harker” in The Harker School came from strong pioneer stock. Catherine and Sarah Harker, who founded and ran Miss Harker’s School for several decades, must have taken great pride in their maternal grandmother Otelia. She was a pioneer who joined the Oregon Trail in 1847 and was elected “first Mother Queen” of the Oregon Pioneer Association in 1909 when she was 95 years old.

Our school’s archives contain an obituary, probably written by her daughter, Sarah Ellen Harker, and published in a San Francisco newspaper. Otelia died in 1911, and we have the original news item.

According to the obituary, Otelia Winchel (sic) was born on January 14, 1814, in Brookville, Indiana. She married John Cullen in 1835
and produced a boy, John W. Cullen, the following year. John Sr. died shortly after. In 1842 she married Adam Guthrie Polk.

Otelia and Adam had two daughters, Caroline and Sarah Ellen. Both sisters eventually moved from Indiana to Portland, traveling along the famous Oregon Trail, and then to Palo Alto, where they joined the staff at Miss Harker’s School. Sarah Ellen was the mother of Catherine and Sara Harker.

In 1847, Otelia Polk and her family crossed the plains to Oregon. The head of their wagon train was Samuel Markham. Samuel’s wife, Elizabeth, was Otelia’s cousin. (My source for this is Linda Markham Curry, a living descendant of Elizabeth Winchell.) In her email to me, Ms. Curry writes: “You may be interested to know that Otelia Winchell-Cullen-Polk-DeWitt was cousin to Elizabeth Winchell Markham, who was the mother of Edwin Markham the poet. Edwin has a history in San Jose too.”

The pioneers made a brief stop at the doomed Whitman Station. This was a missionary compound led by Dr. Marcus Whitman. According to the obituary, Dr. Whitman wanted the family to stay there for the winter, but Otelia “seemed to have a presentiment that forbade, and they pushed on toward the Willamette Valley.”

This premonition avoided tragedy for the Polk family as the famous Whitman massacre occurred about one month later on Nov. 29, 1847. (See the website noted below for more information on the massacre.)

Adam Polk died while crossing the Columbia River, leaving his widow and children to survive the harsh winter alone. They arrived at Oregon City, Ore., sometime in November or December 1847. Upon their arrival, they moved into a cabin on First and Morrison streets. Later, they moved into the first frame house in Portland, built by a Captain Crosby.

Otelia married Francis G. De Witt, an officer on a cargo ship in 1848. They had three children together: Marie B., Francis M. and Otelia V.

Mrs. De Witt died on March 21, 1911, in Portland. She was 98 years old.

If you’d like to see the ribbons she was awarded by the Oregon Pioneer Association, we happen to have them.

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Boarding Program Closes, Leaving Great History and Fond Memories Behind

This story originally appeared in the June 2002 issue of Harker News

The Harker Boarding Program, which moved to the Saratoga campus in 1972, officially closed on Thurs., June 6, 2002, due to the continuing space needs of Harker’s expanding K-12 program. The decision almost two years ago to close the program at the end of this school year was extremely difficult for President Howard Nichols who was once a Harker boarding student himself.

Caring, capable staff have taken care of the health, academics and social lives of approximately 1,377 school year boarding students over the years and approximately 2,100 summer boarding students. Study hall, meals, recreation, shopping, haircuts—all the daily needs—were met by the enthusiastic, dedicated dorm staff.

There are only two current staff who have been here since the boarding program began on this campus, Howard Nichols and Dan Gelineau.

Cindy Kerr and Pat Walsh come pretty close to the 30 year mark! Other current staff who have lived and/or worked in the dorm, and the number of years they were dorm staff are Terry Walsh, 24 yrs.; Joe Rosenthal, 20 yrs.; Pam Dickinson (who lived in the family staff apartment with her husband, John Near, and daughter, Casey Near), 11 yrs; Pat Walsh, 10 yrs.; Cindy Kerr, 6 yrs.; Jack Bither, 6 yrs.; J.R. Del Alto, 3 yrs.; and Andrew Hansen, 2 yrs. Many of the dorm staff were coaches, teachers and bus drivers by day, and dorm staff by night! Some staff started out at the Harker dorm and went on to be Harker teachers.

The dorm provided a family element to the school over the years, and with breakfast and dinner served each day to the boarding students, Harker encouraged faculty to come early or stay late and spend time with the boarders. The boarders always enjoyed seeing teachers outside of the classroom, and many of the teachers developed special bonds with this “extended family.”

“There will be a void when the dorms are not here starting next school year,” said Terry Walsh, dorm manager this past final year. “Plus, teachers have become accustomed to coming over for irons, candles, batteries, light bulbs, dice, decks of cards and other various items that the dorm always seemed to have on hand,” she laughed.

We asked former dorm staff to share some of their favorite memories:

“I remember that we would play capture the flag before study hall when daylight-saving time commenced in the spring. We had a great time.”—Howard Nichols, Harker president

“Drive-in movies on the lawn where Dobbins is, big pool parties and whale watching with 24 sick kids and three sick staffers. And I’ve got a million more!!!” —Pat Walsh, Gr. 5 teacher

“One of my fondest memories when I was a houseparent in the dorm was the Major’s dog Dutch, a 140 lb mastiff. Dutch was the unofficial school mascot, and as such, had the run of the dorms and the campus.”—Dan Gelineau, former asst. head of school and current summer camps consultant

“Staying up all night with the kids reading fairy tales after an earthquake; hiking through the hills to cut down the perfect Christmas tree and then having a party to decorate it with handmade ornaments; making bag lunches for the girls so they could have “home” lunch; sewing on untold numbers of patches on sweaters; knowing that kids like Marta, Theresa, Jessica and many others felt like they were ‘home.’ “ —Cindy Kerr, MS math teacher and dept. chair

“I’ll never know who really had more fun in the weekend boarding program —me or the kids!”—Pam Dickinson, director of communications

“Sitting in the dorm office with a bowl of fruit on my desk and having boarders stop by after school for a snack and a chat. The younger kids would plop down on my lap for a little TLC. It will be strange after 23 years not to have children asking me for a key to their room or a dollar or two to buy snacks.”
—Terry Walsh, boarding manager

“I have the greatest respect for the boarding students. Boarders become independent and self-reliant and remember the kindnesses shown to them and know how important kindness is in their lives. I am a much better person because of what I have seen these children do and the expressions of friendship and kindnesses shown to each other. Only if one lived it would one be able to know how meaningful and important the boarders have been to each other.” —Joe Rosenthal, exec. director of advancement & residential life

A special thanks to Terry Walsh, who managed the program this past year, and to this year’s dorm staff who cared for our last batch of wonderful boarding students: houseparents Margaret McGovern, Mary Kay Olks and Tim Butler; and dorm assistants Lynda Sutton, Lee Trotter, Adam Gill and Anthony Wood.

The boarding program has contributed greatly to the fascinating history of The Harker School. Warm memories of boarding students, staff and dorm activities will remain in the hearts of all those touched by this great program.

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