Then & Now – Oakland Schools Part 8

 I hope to show Then and Now images of Oakland Schools in this series of posts. I highlight a bit of the history of each school. Some photos are in the form of drawings or postcards or from the pages of history books. 

Note: Piecing together the history of some of the older schools can be tricky. I do this all at home and online—a work in progress for some. I have been updating my posts when I find something new. Let me know if I make any mistakes or add anything.

Fruitvale Schools 1-3

UPDATED AUGUST 2024

Fruit vale Public School” – Latter Fruitvale No. 1

Fruitvale School, in the early 1880s, was situated on the field. Circa 1880s OMCA H97.1.48
Oakland Tribune Jan 07, 1880

From what I can tell, the school was in the exact general location of Fruitvale Elementary School today, at the corner of Boston Street and School Street.

New Life as Church

1896, after Fruitvale No. 1 was built, the old school was moved and remodeled for use as a church. It was re-dedicated as the Higgins Methodist Episcopal Church in March of 1896.

SF Call Mar 09, 1886
SF Examiner March 1896

The Fruit Vale (as it was sometimes spelled) School district was formed in 1889 to build a new schoolhouse.

SF Examiner June 4, 1889

Fruitvale No. 1 – Fruitvale Elementary School

In 1894, in the  Fruitvale School district, the trustees were forced to meet the demand and take steps to build a larger school. The new school replaced the old Fruitvale School building from the 1880s.

SF Call Aug 27, 1895

The plans called for a $13,000 2-story building with a concrete basement. Each floor was to have four large classrooms and lunchrooms for the teachers. The principal’s office was on the first floor, and a space was reserved for a library. The basement had separate playrooms for the boys and girls, janitor rooms, and a heating apparatus.

“The building cost was $16,000, and it is located in the healthiest spots of this healthy locality.”

SF Call August 27, 1895

The style of the new building was the Italian Renaissance. The architects were Cunningham Bros. of Oakland.

SF Call Aug 27, 1895
Oakland Tribune Jul 26, 1889

The pastures of the Empire Dairy surrounded the school from 1880-1901

Oakland Tribune Dec 13, 1970
Fruitvale School circa 1901

In 1913, Fruitvale School No. 1 was changed to just Fruitvale School.

New School Built

The new Fruitvale School was dedicated on December 1, 1950. It has 14 classrooms, a library, a cafeteria, a kindergarten, and an auditorium. The school was designed by Ponsford and Price Architects and cost $497,700. It can accommodate 569 students.

Oakland Tribune Nov 09, 1949

The dedication was attended by William Taylor, a long-time resident of the Fruitvale District; he was a student at the “old Fruitvale School “in the 1880s. Oakland Tribune June 1962

Fruitvale today
  • Fruitvale School website – OUSD

More on Fruitvale Elementary

Fruitvale School No. 2 Hawthorne School

In 1898, the Fruitvale District determined a need for another school to accommodate the growing population.

D. Franklin Oliver, a local architect, designed the new school.

Oakland Tribune Jul 20, 1903

In 1905, the school added nine more rooms.

In 1913, the name of Fruitvale School No. 2 was changed to Hawthorne School. The school was on Fruitvale at East 17th (Tallant Street)

Hawthorne School Circa 1900 – Cheney Photo Advertising

1923, a concrete culvert was built, and Sausal Creek was filled in.

School Destroyed by Fire in 1923

Oakland Tribune Apr 30, 1923

On the morning of April 30, 1923, 750 pupils, teachers, and staff of the Hawthorne School were evacuated from their classrooms while the entire upper portion of the building was being destroyed by fire. The fire was believed to have started from sparks that fell from the chimney.

Oakland Tribune Apr 30, 1923

Three alarms were sounded, and all available firefighting apparatus rushed to the scene. Two firemen were hurt when a portion of the burning roof gave way.

New School Built

The district purchased the property fronting on East 17th Street, adjoining the playground. The new school was built away from the noise and traffic of Fruitvale Ave.

Oakland Tribune Sept 21, 1924

In September 1924, they laid the cornerstone of the new school building, which John J. Donovan designed. The two-story building, which cost $102,000, contained ten classrooms, offices, and a room for the PTA.

The new school is located at 28th Avenue at East 17th Street, across from the old Fruitvale School No 2. The old school building was destroyed by fire the year before.

Oakland Tribune Sept 21, 1924

The following items were put into the sealed cornerstone:

  • Minutes of Board of Education May 1924
  • Minutes of Board of Education June 1924
  • Outline of the school plans
  • Program from Cornerstone ceremony
  • History of the PTA
  • Names of all the pupils enrolled
  • Group photos of all the classes.
  • School Directory

The new school opened in January 1925.

Oakland Tribune Jan 24, 1925

The school is located at 1700 28th Ave, Oakland, CA 94601

Hawthorne Today

Today, Hawthorne is the home of the Achieve Academy.

Achieve Academy (TK-5) serves students in the Fruitvale neighborhood and is one of Oakland’s highest-performing elementary campuses.

Hawthorne School -photo by Richard A. Walker Creative Commons 2023

Fruitvale No. 3 – Allendale School

Before 1904, children living along High Street had to walk to Fruitvale School No. 1 on School Street. The Allendale District was chosen because of its central location for the children from Laurel Grove District (Laurel District) to High Street and Foothill Blvd, then known as Old County Road.

Fruitvale School No. 3 was built in the Allendale neighborhood in 1904.

The 1904 school building cost $107,437 to build. The first year’s enrollment was 809. A four-room addition was added in 1910, and another four rooms, costing $49,458, were added in 1928.

Oakland Tribune July 19, 1910

Miss Alice V. Baxley was the first principal of Allendale School from 1904 to 1913.

Fruitvale No 3 –
Renamed Allendale 1913

In 1913 Fruitvale No. 3 was renamed Allendale School.

Oakland Tribune Mar 1913
Oakland Tribuine Mar 1914

Dangerous and a Hazard

The school was deemed unsafe and closed in 1953. At the time, it was one of the oldest school buildings; two others from the pre-1906 era were still standing. The old school building withstood the 1906 earthquake.

San Francisco Examiner Dec 1953
SF Examiner Dec 20, 1953

Seventeen portables were placed on the site to house the students until the fall of 1959.

The Old Allendale School Just Before Demolition – From the Family of Doss Welsh
OaklandnTribune June 21, 1957

The day of reckoning has come for the old Allendale School building which has been razed”

Oakland Tribune Jul 14, 1957

Oakland Tribune June 21, 1957
Oakland Tribune June 21, 1957

New School Built

Architects George E. Ellinger and Roland Gibbs proposed a new school to cost $363,250.

Oakland Tribune June 18, 9158

Bids for a new school with 13 classrooms, a library, a multipurpose room, one kindergarten, and administration offices opened in 1958.

The school was completed in the fall of 1959.

Oakland Tribune Jun 4, 1959
Oakland Tribune Nov 8, 1959

Allendale Today

Allendale Today
  • Allendale School Website – OUSD

Fruitvale – Allendale Junior High

Tulare Advance-Register Oct 26, 1928

The new school, Allendale-Fruitvale Junior High, was constructed at Hopkins (MacArthur Blvd) and Coolidge Avenue.

Oakland Tribune Oct 10, 1928
Oakland Tribune Nov 9, 1928

The Allendale-Fruitvale Junior High was changed to Bret Harte Junior High at a school board meeting in 1929; the other name under consideration was Dimond Junior High.

The school was named after  Bret Harte, an American author and poet best known for his somewhat romanticized accounts of pioneer life in California. He lived in Oakland from about 1854 to 1857 at the home of his stepfather, Colonel Andrew F. Williams, who was later Oakland’s fourth mayor.

Oakland Tribune Nov 16, 1930

The school was the last to the new school to be built out of the 1924 Bond issue. It was constructed at the cost of $120,000.

The building contained 22 classrooms, and on opening day in 1930, 699 pupils enrolled. The school graduated students from Fruitvale, Allendale, Sequoia, and Laurel Schools.

The school opened in 1930.

The Oakland Post Enquirer Jan 10, 1930

The school’s auditorium gymnasium building was constructed in 1950.

The Oakland Post Enquirer Aug 2, 1950
Oakland Tribune Aug 29, 1950

In 1957, the school district opened bids for a new building at Bret Harte.

Oakland Tribune July 7, 1957

The new building was built on campus in 1959, and another major expansion occurred in 1979.

The 1930 time capsule in a copper box found during the 1979 construction was never opened and has since been lost.

The school is located at 3700 Coolidge Avenue, Oakland, CA 94602

Bret Harte Middle SchoolToday

  • Bret Harte Middle School – website

More Info:

The End

5 thoughts on “Then & Now – Oakland Schools Part 8

  1. The school I went to in first grade was Allendale School, originally designated Fruitvale School No. 3. It was gigantic and it was less than a block from our little house on Viola Street. Scroll down in this article to see several photos of it. They tore it down when I was 16. A friend and I decided we had to get the gold ball on top of the flag pole before it was lost to the bulldozers, and history. So up we went one night with saw a flashlight, and I got the flagpole. The ball was about 7” in diameter, made of redwood and painted gold. The school was made of redwood too, as were all the homes in the area that were built around the same time. Our house was built in 1910. I kept the ball in the garage until I married and left home. It may still be there.
    — Joe Livak
    Reno, NV

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