Calvin Simmons

A special edition of my blog in honor of Black History Month and a wonderful man.

Calvin
Calvin Simmons Conductor

I was lucky enough to know Clavin Simmons personally. He was the conductor of the Oakland Symphony when I worked there.

Let me back up a little bit. My mom Sarah Chambers started working at the Oakland Symphony in 1977 when I was still in high school. She began as the receptionist and worked her way up the ladder to the Director of Education.

SF Examiner January 28, 1985

She would sign me up during the summer to hand out flyers at lunchtime events. One of our board members would do the same with her daughter Libby Schaff was the Mayor of Oakland from 2015-2023.

I was hired in 1980 as the receptionist and worked my way up the ladder to Box Office/Marketing Assistant. We both worked for the Symphony until September 1986, when they filed for bankruptcy.

Before the Oakland Symphony

Calvin was born in San Francisco in 1950 to Henry Calvin and Mattie Pearl Simmons.

Music was a part of his life from the beginning. He learned how to play the piano from his Mother.

By age 11, he was conducting the San Francisco Boys Chorus, started by Madi Bacon, of which he had been a member. 

Calvin attended Balboa High School in San Francisco, where he was a member of the orchestra.

“did tons of conducting with school orchestra.”

Madi Bacon
SF Examiner September 19, 1969

The Maestro Kid

He was the assistant conductor with the San Francisco Opera from 1972 to 1975, winning the Kurt Herbert Adler Award.

He remained active at the San Francisco Opera for all his adult life, supporting General Director Kurt Herbert Adler, first as a repetiteur and then as a member of the conducting staff. He made his formal debut conducting Giacomo Puccini’s La Bohème with Ileana Cotrubas. His later work on a production of Dmitri Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District drew national attention.

In 1979 he conducted the premiere of Menotti’s La Loca in San Diego.

He made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera, conducting Engelbert Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel, returning the following year. He was on the musical staff at Glyndebourne from 1974 to 1978.

Oakland Symphony

with Harold Lawrence, manager Oakland Symphony circa 1978

Simmons became musical director of the Oakland Symphony Orchestra at the age of 28 in 1978. He was one of the early African-American conductors of a major orchestra.

His debut audition was in early 1978.

SF Examiner April 16, 1978
SF Examiner April 23, 1978

A Maestro Wordless – September 1978

SF Examiner September 26, 1978
Windsor Star January 22, 1982

Calvin joined the Youth Orchestra tour in July 1982

His final concerts were three performances of the Requiem of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in the summer of 1982 with the Masterworks Chorale and the Midsummer Mozart Festival Orchestra.

Finale – 1982

Calvin July 1982 Oakland Symphony Picnic – Photo by Bill Londagin

On Sunday, August 22, 1982, I was next door helping my husband, who was repairing our neighbor’s roof. All of a sudden, my mom screams out the window that Calvin has died. Such a sad day. It took another week to find his body. It was such a loss to Oakland and the music world. He was on his way to greatness.

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The_San_Francisco_Examiner_Mon__Aug_23__1982_
SF Examiner August 23, 1982

Calvin was visiting friends in Upper State New York. Connery Pond was where he went a lot to unwind and regroup. While waiting for dinner, Calvin took a canoe ride out in the pond. He was by himself about 150 feet from the shore; he was a good swimmer. A woman was taking pictures of the sunset from the beach. She pointed her camera towards Calvin, and he must have noticed that, and being the ham he was, he stood up to pose. He then fell into the water.

SF Examiner August 23, 1982
Philadelphia Daily News August 24, 1982

A Final Tribute

There was a memorial service on September 07, 1982, at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco; more than 2200 people attended.

There was a memorial concert on September 20, 1982, at the Paramount Theatre.

SF Examiner September 07, 1982
1982

More on Calvin

The End

Thorn Road Bible School

In 1926 the First Presbyterian Church of Oakland approved the plans to build a Bible School in the Montclair District of Oakland.

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Drawing by Charles Williams circa 1926

The building was to cost about $25,000.  It became necessary because they had outgrown the temporary accommodations at the school. They started out with seven students in January of 1926; by July, they had eighty.

In June of 1927, it was announced that the school would be open for four weeks during summer vacation.

Oakland Tribune June 1927

The 1920s showed significant growth in Montclair, and the bible school started having Sunday services for the area’s residents.   They held Easter Services up on Skyline Dr and festive Christmas services.

Sunrise Service Circa 1928

Christmas circa 1928

ThornRoad Bible School Circa 1928
Oakland Tribune April 05, 1930

In 1930 Montclair Presbyterian Church was organized with 90 Charter Members.

Oakland Tribune April 1930

In 1938 they built a new Chapel which was there until they made the present complex in the mid-1960s at  5701 Thornhill Drive.

The Chapel as it looked in 1940

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The End

Donate

Hawthorne House – Sheffield Village

Display Home – Sheffield Village Opens Mar 1941

Located at 168 Marlow Drive in Sheffield Village.  Completely furnished by  Jackson Furniture Company

E.B. Field Corporation, owners and builders of Sheffield Village.

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Oakland Tribune March 30, 1941

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Oakland Tribune March 30, 1941

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168 Marlow Ave

168 Marlow Drive Today google maps

Oakmore Highlands Homes

Oakland Tribune

According to the above article, the first home was constructed for Erwin Howell. The two-story colonial was erected at 4065 Oakmore Road.

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Oakland Tribune June 5, 1927
Oakland Tribune June 5, 1927
4065 Oakmore Road
4065 Oakmore Road – Google Maps

1924 Hoover Avenue

Oakland Tribune Sept 1927
Oakland Tribune Sept 25, 1927
1924 Hoover St
1924 Hoover Street
  • Spanish Style
  •  Grace Clifford
  • Frederick H Reimers Architect
  • Irwin Reimers Builder
  • 1927
  • Google Maps

1941 Hoover Avenue

Oakland Tribune November 27, 1927
Oakland Tribune November 27, 1927
1941 Hoover Ave
1941 Hoover Avenue – Google Maps

4420 Bridgeview Drive

Oakland Tribune 1928
Bestor robinson
The Bestor Robinson Home – 4420 Bridgeview Drive

3992 Oakmore Road

Oakland Tribune May 1927
Oakland Tribune Jun 1927
3992 Oakmore
3992 Oakmore Road
  • English Cottage
  • Marie Wheeler – owner
  • Florence Wheeler – owner
  • 1927
  • Google Map

4125 Oakmore Road

Oakland Tribune Jun 1927
Oakland Tribune Jun 5 1917
4125 Oakmore road
4125 Oakmore Road  – Bing Maps
  • Italian Design
  • John G. Evans Owner
  • 1927
  •  Bing Maps

3921 Oakmore Road

Oakland Tribune Mar 20, 1927
3921 Oakmore Rd
3921 Oakmore Road – Google Maps

4350 Bridge View Drive

Oakland Tribune June 23, 1929
4350 Brideview
4350 Bridge View Drive – from Google Maps
  • Spanish Style
  • A.H. Monez – owner
  • 1929
  • Google map

4266 Edge Street

Oakland Tribune Jun 5, 1927
Oakland Tribune Jun 1927
4266 Edge
4266 Edge Street – Google Maps
  • Spanish Style
  • Lewis W. Jefferson Owner
  • Carl Jefferson Owner
  • Dec 1927
  • Google Maps

3956 Oakmore Road

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Oakland Tribune 1928
3956 Oaklmore troad
3956 Oakmore Road

1921 Rosecrest Drive

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Oakland Tribune 1935
1921 Rosecresr
1921 Rosecrest Drive
  • Monterey Colonial
  • Chester H. Treichel Architect
  • 1935
  • Realtor.Com

The End

Oakmore Highland Model Homes

Breuner-Tribune Home June 1934

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Oakland Tribune Jun 1934
1774 Liedmet
1774 Leimert Blvd –  Google maps

Display Homes of 1934

New homes at 1746 Leimert, 1808 Leimert and 1816 Leimert – Sept 1934

1746 Leimert-COLLAGE

1746 Leimert, 1808 Leimert and 1816 Leimert

Just a few of the homes in the Oakmore Highlands Neighborhood.

The End

Havenscourt

SF Call Nov 29, 1913

Wickman Havens Real Estate Company opened Havenscourt in 1912.   Within the 170 acres of Havenscourt are 21 miles of streets and sidewalks.¹

SF Call April 13, 1912

The official entrance was at Havenscourt Blvd and East 14th Street, with a pergola and a gazebo. The Havenscourt station and business district were located on Havenscourt Blvd and Bancroft.².

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Photo by Cheney Photo Advertising – Oakland History Room
The entrance to Havenscourt
1920Havenscourt Station East 14th St. & Havenscourt Blvd.
Havenscourt Blvd at Bancroft looking towards Frick School

Two Schools, 17 Acres Playground, a Civic Center, and a train station

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67th Avenue between Arthur St and Avenal Ave

Then and Now – Above and Below

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Looking south on 66th Street from Arthur St
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Looking south on 65th Ave from Arthur St
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All photos were taken by Cheney Photo Advertising Company and are from Oakland History Room or OMCA.

Links:

  1. Story of Havenscourt – SF Call Nov 29, 1913
  2.  The Home Place Beautiful – Oakland Tribune Jun 1, 1912
  3.  Showing 6712 Flora St circa 1912-1916 OMCA – Havenscourt Tract Block 3

The End

Updated Dec 16, 2019

Oakmore Highlands

OakmoreRollingHIlls

Rolling Hills of Oakmore circa 1920’s – Oakland History Room

Natural beauty abounds in the 150 acres of wooded, rolling hills that comprise the Oakmore District or Oakmore Highlands.  The Walter H. Leimert Company laid out the subdivision with wide streets and ample sidewalks.  See Oakmore Highland History

The Leimert Bridge was designed in 1926, by George A. Posey, to safely accommodate vehicle traffic, Park Boulevard Streetcars, and pedestrians.

The Leimert Bridge during construction and in 1926,  Photo by Cheney Photo Advertising

The original subdivision was bordered by Sausal Creek and Dimond Canyon.  During the initial sales period, sound design was promoted through a model open house program called the ‘Oakmore Home Ideal’ where buyers could visit a custom home designed by local architects Miller & Warnecke.

Later, in 1934, The Leimert Company teamed with the Oakland Tribune and Breuner’s Furniture Company to furnish a demonstration model home that drew 8,000 visitors in three weeks.

Oakland_Tribune_Sun__Jan_28__1934_

Oakland Tribune June 28, 1934

The following year another Breuner’s furnished house was nicknamed “Golden Windows” to highlight the extensive use of glass on the view side of the home and the commanding views from the subdivision.

Oakland_Tribune_Sun__Aug_4__1935_

Oakland Tribune August 1934

  • Real Estate Developer: Walter H. Leimert Company
  • Contractors: Park Boulevard Company
  • Property Managers: Mitchell & Austin
  • 150 Acres, 4 tracts 440 lots
  • Sales began in October 1926

Photos

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Aerial view of upper Dimond Canyon and surrounding, still mostly undeveloped, neighborhoods, Leimert Bridge visible in the foreground. – 1926-1936 Oakland History Room

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Aerial view of Dimond Canyon – 1926-1936 – Oakland History Room

Various Articles

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Oakland Tribune Jan 05, 1927

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College Pines

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Broadway Terrace @ Ostrander St.   Photo from Oakland History Room.

College Pines is located at the corner of  Broadway Terrace and Harbord Drive location(formally Edith), just past the Claremont Country Club.  The name of College Pines was chosen because of the close proximity to the College of the Sisters of Holy Names, a new High School. 

Oakland Tribune Jun 1932

The sales office was located at the corner of Broadway Terrace and Ostrander Road, as seen above.

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Oakland Tribune June 12, 1932

Below are pictures of  Broadway Terrace and Chetwoood and Broadway Terrace, and Harbord Drive.   They were taken in 1933 and are from the Oakland Public Library History Room.

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Harbord Drive and Broadway Terrace in 1933 –  Oakland History Room Photo
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Broadway Terrace and Clarewood Drive in 1933 – Oakland History Room photo

The homesites front on along Harbord Drive for about a half-mile or more.  The lots were priced at $27.00 per foot.  A forty-foot lot would cost $1075.00, with a low down payment and easy terms.  Sold by the Claremont Pines Corporation and later Michell & Austin.

Oakland Tribune June 1932

Holy Names Central High School was built on Harbord Drive and opened in 1934.

Display Homes

In December of 1933, the first display home opened at 4339 Harbord Drive. The house had eight rooms with two baths and a 14 x 32-foot rumpus room, and

pleasing features galore.” 

Oakland Tribune Dec 1933

The house was priced at $6850 and was recently sold in 2016 for $1,360,000.

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Oakland Tribune Dec 1933

In September of 1934, another display home was opened at 4347 Harbord Drive.  The green and white wood and brick cottage and two bedrooms and a den or nursery, and a large playroom. The house was priced at $6500, with just a $75 down payment and $75 a month.  The home recently sold for $825,000 in 2012.

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Oakland Tribune Sept 1934

Misc. ads for homes

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Update:

The stone pillar is still there at the corner of Broadway Terrace and Ostrander Street.

Broadway Terrace and Ostrander St 2018 – Photo from Google Maps

The End

The Rabbit Hole

Featured

I grew up in the Montclair District of Oakland, CA. I attended Thornhill Elementary School, Montera Junior High, and Skyline High School and spent some time at Merritt College.

My childhood home in Montclair

I lived in Montclair until I was a young adult, and since then, I have lived by Lake Merritt, in the Fruitvale District, on Piedmont Ave, the King Estates Area, and now the Laurel District.

I have been an Oakland history buff since attending an Oakland Heritage Alliance Tour of the Fernwood Neighborhood in the Montclair District of Oakland in 1984. On that tour, I learned a train (Sacramento Northern) ran through Montclair in the early 1900s, and people lived in the area as early as the 1860s and have been hooked ever since. Since then, I have spent a lot of time looking into Montclair’s history, and I have learned a lot. This will be the best way to get it out of my head and onto paper.

2018. I started this blog because I had collected so much information on Oakland’s history that I couldn’t wait to share it. Posting in Facebook groups isn’t the best outlet for me. I love sharing what I know and reading what others share, but things get lost on Facebook.

I got started with the help of my dear friend Phil, and I was off and running. It should be easy, I say to myself, because I had already laid out actual pages and everything I wanted to say.

But it wasn’t.

I tend to get bogged down in the details, worry about getting my facts correct, and find it hard to find a happy medium between too much and too little. So, this is a work in progress, so bear with me.

I hope you will enjoy history as much as I do!

Down The Hole, I Go

But I have strayed from the topic of this post. When researching one thing, you often find something else that has nothing to do with what you are looking for, but it piques your interest. That happens to me a lot.

You might know this as the “Internet rabbit hole” you see when you research one thing and then accidentally go to Wikipedia, and then you are trying to find out what happened to Jimmy Hoffa. That is it in a nutshell.

One rabbit hole I get sucked into often is I will see a picture like this one and want to know more about it.

Oakland Tribune Apr 2, 1911
  1. Location
  2. Is it still there?

Those two things can be challenging as the location is sometimes vague and wrong. Sometimes, the area is correct. When looking up the house, I wonder who it was built for. Were they famous or rich, maybe both?

I have compiled many of these pictures of newly built houses. I decided to create a map using Google Maps. The map I have made is What was there or still is… Oakland, California.

I have already added many homes I found while down the rabbit hole.

Some are from long ago and long gone, but some are still there.
This information is based on clippings, newspapers, and photos. It may not be accurate, as address numbers have changed, and locations are often vague.

Maroon – Still there
Black – Gone
Yellow – Landmark
Green – Berkeley
Purple – Piedmont
Red – Questions – researching

I still have many pages in the works; I must get myself out of this hole.

This might help explain Rabbit Hole.

Enjoy!