Then & Now – Oakland School Part 11

I plan to show Then and Now images of Oakland Schools in this series of posts. Along with a bit of the history of each school, I highlight. 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 is sometimes 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 of any mistakes or additions.

Chabot Elementary School

Bungalow Annex

The Board of Education in May of 1926 approved the plans for a new school to relieve the overcrowding at  Claremont School.  

Oakland Tribune May 20, 1926

The new school was on Chabot Road at Patton Street. The Tudor Revival-style school was built in 1927 and was initially known as the Claremont School Annex. The seven-room structure was designed to hold 350 students and cost $50,000 using funds from a 1924 voter-approved school bond.

Oakland Tribune May 20, 1926

The “Claremont” Annex was dedicated on April 21, 1927. The school cost approx. $89,000. The architect was William G. Corlett (1887-1954.)

  

Oakland Tribune April 21, 1927

Soon after the school opened its doors, the name was changed to Anthony Chabot School.

New Addition

In 1937 an addition was added and funded by the Living New Deal.

Chabot School – New Living Deal

In the mid-1950s, a portion of the old Sacramento Northern right-of-way was acquired and converted into an upper playground field.

Chabot Today

Chabot is located at 6686 Chabot Road

Google Maps
Google Maps

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Claremont Middle School

The new school at the corner of College Avenue and Birch Street was to be named Claremont School, and it opened in August of 1913 as an elementary school. John J. Donovan and Walter D Reed designed the school.

By 1916 the school was so crowded that they were using the teachers’ room and the auditorium as classrooms. Portables were added later.

List of Graduates 1921

Oakland Tribune 1921
Oakland Tribune December 8, 1922

In 1925 7th and 8th grades were added. The elementary grades were transferred to The Annex (Chabot School) when it opened in 1927. Claremont soon after 1927 became Claremont Junior High.

Oakland Tribune August 18, 1933

In the 1950s, 28 classrooms were added to the Claremont campus, plus a cafeteria and gymnasium.

Oakland Tribune May 13, 1951

50th Anniversary

Oakland Tribune 1963

Claremont Today

The Photo By Dorothy Londagin

The historic gates are all that remain of the original school building that was demolished in 1976. The gates were moved to the corner of Birch and College Avenue.

OUSD Photo
5750 College Avenue 
Google Maps

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Members of the Vernon-Rockridge Improvement Club had hoped that the school would be named Vernon-Rockridge.

Oakland Tribune December 3, 1913

Centennial Celebration 2013

Letters to the Editor

  1. Claremont Middle the need historical accuracy – April 4, 2013
  2. Claremont Middle Centennial will be Accurate- April 112013  

Crocker Highlands School

In 1922 the board of education authorized the purchase of land for a new school named Crocker Highlands School.

Oakland Tribune June 14, 1925

Groundbreaking ceremonies were held in April 1925.

The six-room structure costing $40,000 was built as part of the 1924 school bond issue. Wythe, Blaine & Olson designed the school.

Oakland Tribune January 17, 1926

The school was dedicated in September 1925.

Miss Bernice Baxter was the first principal of the school. There were 61 students enrolled that first year, and by 1929 there were 485 students enrolled.

In 1929 plans were approved for a new $95,000 addition of 11 classrooms and an auditorium. Blaine & Olson were the architects.

Oakland Tribune 1929

In 1937 another addition was added.

In 1971 the original building from 1924 was declared unsafe in an earthquake and was to be replaced.

Oakland Tribune April 22, 1971

In 1976 when the school was upgraded for earthquake safety. They added a two-story basement with ten classrooms, two special education rooms, a multipurpose room, a library/resource teachers, a music room, a teachers’ lounge, a computer lab, a kitchen, storage, and custodial rooms. 

Crocker Highlands Today

Google Maps
Google Maps

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Grass Valley School

Oakland Tribune November 4, 1953

In 19Oakland’sd’s newest school was officially known as Grass Valley School. The name was chosen by parents of the children attending the school after it was temporarily known as the Toler Heights Annex. Meadow View and Rancho Benito came in 2nd and 3rd.

On December 11, 1952, the school was dedicated. For the first 3 or 4 years, the school consisted of three portables and 100 students.

New School Building

Oakland Tribune July 5, 1956

In October 1957, plans were submitted to build a new school with eight classrooms. A kindergarten, a special education room, a library, a multipurpose room, and admin. Offices. The new school was to house 362 students, cost about $350,000, and was expected to be completed by August 1958.

First Day of School 1958

Oakland Tribune September 8, 1958
Oakland tribune September 8, 1958

Grass Valley Today

The is located at 4720 Dunkirk Avenue

Google Maps
Google Maps

More Info:

Grass Valley Website – OUSD

Hillcrest School

I couldn’tcouldn’t find any earlier photos of the school. I will update you if I do.

Construction on the new Rockridge Highlands school began in 1950.

Oakland Tribune January 12, 1950

The new school housed 210 children in six classrooms, a kindergarten, and a library.

It was designed by Anderson and Simonds and cost $218,697.

The school was dedicated on January 19, 1951, and was the 27th building to be built due to the $15 million bond issue voted in 1945.

Oakland Tribune January 19, 1951

In May 1951, Rockridge Highlands School’s name was changed to Hillcrest School.

Oakland Tribune May 31, 1951

1991 Fire

Hillcrest was spared during the 1991 Oakland Hills fire.

October 28, 1991

Forty-six Hillcrest families, including 59school’sschool’s 236 students, lost their homes in the fire.

The playground in 1993
S.F. Examiner
S.F. Examiner November 1, 1991

Hillcrest Today

The school is located at 30 Marguerite Drive

APPLE MAPS
Hillcrest Today – Google Maps

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Rockridge School

Note: I could not locate any pictures of the first school. I will update this if I find some.

Oakland Tribune December 8, 1922

They purchased a triangle piece of property on Broadway Terrace adjoining the Claremont Country club facing Broadway.

Triangle piece of land – Apple maps

The school opened in February 1922. It cost $75,000.

They built a Spanish colonial renaissance-style two-story structure with cement stucco and a tile roof. The exterior was painted coral with windows green-blue and tiles bright red.

Every one of the classrooms opened upon a terrace that sloped down to a garden.
Ventilation in the new building was by windows and not by a fan, and there was a warm bench for drying wet shoes.

Large Play Space

“The kindergarten is one of the best in the west.”  

Oakland Tribune

The kindergarten contained ample play space, a fireplace, various nooks, and a glass porch.

Plans were approved for a new addition consisting of an assembly hall, and three classrooms were added in 1927.

Oakland Tribune March 23, 1927

FrElsie’s Elsie’s Column in 1938

Condemned Building 1953 and 1971

In 1953 the auditorium was condemned and closed. Preliminary plans for a new one were drawn up in 1957.

Oakland Tribune September 9, 1953
Oakland Tribune December 12, 1957
Oakland Tribune April 29, 1959
Oakland Tribune April 29, 1959

The old building from 1922 was deemed unsafe in an earthquake in 1971.

Oakland Tribune April 15, 1971

In 1978-1979, the school building was torn down, and portable classrooms were placed on the grounds.

S.F. Examiner May 25, 1978

 The school closed after the 1988-89 school year and later became Far West High School, which closed in 2011. 

Rockridge Today

Apple Maps

The school is located at 5263 Broadway Terrace.

More Info:

Update Dec 2022

The End