|
|
Oak
View
Elementary
School
400 E. Wayne
Ave. Silver Spring, MD 20901 301-650-6434 Fax 301-650-6453
Oak
View History
early
years
SBJ
article
the
fire
principals
Special
thanks to Lilliam Isaac, OV's
Administrative Secretary for many years, for obtaining
many of the documents
below.
The
Early Years
-
from
a 1957 new teacher orientation
brochure...
-
- Oak View
Elementary School:
1948-1957
- by Ernest
Woodchek, Trustee,
1948-1955
|
- Welcome to Oak
View!
- We are happy to have you
with us.
- As a trained teacher, you
will know what to expect
professionally now that classes
have begun.
- But has anyone told you
the story of Oak View?
- If you will bear with us,
we would like to relate some of
the highlights in Oak View's
history. Perhaps our story will
help to orient those of you who
are with us for the first time,
and to refresh the memories of
our "older" teachers.
-
- We think the history of Oak
View is unique in the annals of
education. As a plant, it has
served as a guide for other
schools throughout the nation.
Oak View's facilities were
written up in considerable detail
in the School Board
Journal in September 1949.
(To see
this article,
click
here.)
Similarly, the school has been
acclaimed by the Arlington
(Virginia) school board as
containing the "maximum of good
planning features at a minimum
cost." And Oak View received the
Washington Board of Trade
biennial architectural award in
1949.
-
- As the focal point of
community interest, it is only
necessary to point out that the
school was built in a community
whose members are well above
average in intelligence; a
community composed of
personalities from all parts of
the United States who bring to
this school a diversity of firmly
implanted ideas about how their
children should be educated.
-
- OakView opened September 20,
1948 after ten years of active
prodding of County authorities by
the citizens of the community. In
1937 an item for a school site
appeared for the first time in
the County budget. The first
plans for the school appeared to
be adequate, but had to be
changed three times to fit the
County budget. Finally, after ten
years of hauling and pulling
between the County authorities
and the community, ground was
broken and construction of a
ten-room building was begun
December 18, 1947.
-
- By the time the school opened
there were 475 pupils to be
accommodated in a building
designed for 350. Although 70
pupils were transferred back to
other schools during the first
week, it was still necessary to
eliminate the sixth grade (where
enrollment was very light). And
by the end of that first year,
enrollment had increased to
555.
-
- Almost the first action of
the Parent and Teachers
Association of Oak View was a
protest to the Board of Education
that the school was "completely
inadequate." The Association
urged that steps be taken at once
to expand the existing building.
Without some such action by the
Board of Education the school was
faced with two problems: either
to re-district, or inaugurate
double sessions. Our dilemma was
readily recognized by the Board
of Education, and , in 1949,
budgetary provision was made for
four additional rooms to the
school. Pending completion of the
addition, however, the school was
faced with over-crowding. With an
enrollment of 555 it was
necessary to put the first three
grades on half-day sessions. The
addition was completed in
December 1949 and occupied by
classes immediately after the
Christmas holidays.
-
- In the beginning, the
boundaries of the school district
encompassed all of the territory
roughly within the area bordered
by what is now Northwood Park on
the east, Sligo Creek Parkway to
the west, Indian Spring golf
Course to the north, and Piney
Branch Road to the south; The
school had both "walking" and
"bus" children. This meant an
additional problem as far as the
lunch period was concerned. In
one period of twenty-one days,
early in 1950, the cafeteria
served 5724 lunches in spite of
the fact that it had an estimated
capacity for only 2100. It was
inevitable, therefore, that some
relief had to be given to the
small cafeteria included in the
original ten-room building.
-
- Again in 1950 and 1951, the
Oak View PTA clamored for more
space. As a result of the
activity of the PTA and
interested citizens' groups, the
County authorities began a
serious study of the area looking
toward the eventual building of
additional school plants in the
vicinity. This was probably the
peak of community interest in the
school and its problems. Regular
and special meetings of the PTA
were held. A mass meeting was
organized jointly by the various
citizens' groups. Some newspaper
headlines which drew attention to
the problem read:
-
- CITIZENS TO STUDY CROWDED
FACILITIES AT OAKVIEW
- 500 CITIZENS PROTEST CROWDING
OF OAKVIEW--ASK FOR MORE
SPACE
- PROTEST MEETING TO BE HELD BY
FOUR CIVIC GROUPS
-
- All this activity finally
brought about two solutions for
OakView. First, the Board of
Education included in its
1952-1953 program provision for
an eight-room addition to Oak
View. Secondly, Eastern Suburban
Junior High opened its doors in
January 1952, and plans were
immediately adopted by the Board
of Education to transfer all
"bus" children form Oak View to
Eastern.
-
- Until the third addition to
the school was finished,
kindergarten had to be postponed
in 1952, and the first and second
grades went on half-day
sessions--the former in the
morning; the latter in the
afternoon.
-
- With these changes, the
school could at last settle down
to a more or less administrative
routine and concentrate chiefly
on educating our youngsters.
During this period of expansion
and growth the school was
exceedingly fortunate in keeping
together a teaching staff whose
capacity and willingness to carry
on despite the frequent
inconveniences and disruptions
earned the admiration of the
entire community.
-
- The school had its lighter
moments: the PTA "carnival" and
the school "fall frolic"--both of
which have become traditional;
the Halloween parade; the fathers
"surprising" the School Board by
building a bridge across Long
Branch Creek at Melbourne Avenue;
and a weekly Saturday work group
of parents to clear a 5000 square
feet of play area adjacent to the
school--to cite a few
examples.
-
- Meanwhile, the school has
continued to be the target for
visitors from abroad as well as
from all parts of the United
States. For instance, the
cafeteria came in for high praise
from a group of experts who were
attending an annual convention of
the national School Service
Association.
-
- The school was tentatively
named the "Flower Avenue School".
But soon after it opened, a
referendum of parents, teachers
and pupils unanimously chose the
name "Oak V iew" because of the
grove of oaks in which the
building was located. This name
was readily agreed to by the
Board of Education.
-
- It is to the credit of
everyone concerned that the
"conflict of ideas" which
characterized the early years of
the school proved to be the
stimulus for an ultimate
parent-teacher relationship which
has been the strength of the
school.
-
- Any recitation of the events
in the life of Oak V iew would be
incomplete without mention to two
outstanding personalities in its
history. The late Dr. Edwin W.
Broome, Superintendent of
Education for Montgomery County,
saw clearly the part that Oak
View would play in our community.
Mrs. Loretta Alderton, our
principal, had the capacity to
interpret Dr. Broome's vision and
the dedication to see it through.
It is to those two individuals
that the school owes a deep debt
of gratitude.
-
- Today, Oak V iew begins its
tenth year. With your help, it
will continue its role as the
main bulwark of present-day
community life.
-
|
The
Fire, Part 1:
Arson
is Suspected!
Maryland
News.........May 26,
1966
|
Arson Is
Suspected
- At
School
Circumstances
surrounding the $200,000 fire at Oak
View Elementary School, Silver
Spring, on Monday, strongly point to
arson, according to Silver Spring
Fire Chief David B. Gratz. Fire and
police officials are working on
information that a boy was seen in
or near one of the blazing
classrooms by a teacher who spotted
the fire.
Flames swept
through the school less than 40
minutes after the 600 students had
finished classes and gone home for
the day. Teachers, attending a
faculty meeting, and a group of Girl
Scouts, were discovered but all
escaped injury.
The 19-year-old
elementary school on East Wayne Ave.
next to Long Branch Park in the
Highland View section of Montgomery
County will not be completely
repaired until at least September.
Four classrooms were destroyed and
eight others damaged.
Fighting the
blaze for more than an hour befoe
bringing it under control, more than
100 fiemen were on the scene, from
all three Silver Spring stations, as
well as Takoma Park and
Chillum.
|
The
Fire, Part 2:
Arsonist
is Found!
Washington
Post..........June 2,
1966
-
Boy Kept
After School Started $200,000
Blaze
|
- A 9-year-old
boy told a Montgomery County
Juvenile Court Justice that he
started a $200,000 blaze at the
Oak View Elementary school last
week because his fourth grade
teacher kept him after classes
for talking out of
turn.
- The fire on
May 23 burned out a wing of the
school at East Wayne Avenue and
Walden Road, Silver Spring. The
boy, too young to be charged with
arson, was accused of "committing
a delinquent act" by police two
days later.
- The boy
appeared at a hearing Monday and
told Judge Alfred D. Noyes he
found a lighted cigarette in the
school playground after he was
kept in for 10 or 15 minutes at
the end of the school
day.
- He said he
re-entered the building, threw
the cigarette on a couch in a
second floor teachers'lounge, saw
the couch start to smolder, then
returned to the playground and
stayed until fire engines
arrived.
- The Court has
ordered psychiatric tests for the
boy.
- Judge Noyes
said the child has displayed
evidence of emotional problems
both at home and school. His
parents, who are co-operating
fully with the Court, have kept
him out of school since the
charges were filed, Noyes
said.
- The burned
out wing of the school has been
declared unusable for the rest of
the school year.
- About 250
pupils in the fourth, fifth and
sixth grades are being taken by
bus to other schools in the area.
First, second and third grade
pupils are attending classes in
undamaged parts of Oak
View.
|
|
Oak
View Elementary
School
Principals
|
Name
|
School
Years
|
|
Mrs.
Loretta P.
Alderton
|
1949-1969
|
|
Mr. Enno
T. Reckendorf
|
1970-1976
|
|
Mrs.
Drucille H.
Stafford
|
1977-1978
|
|
Mr.
Robert E.
Hatchel
|
1979-1982
|
|
Dr.
Gabriel H. L.
Jacobs
|
1983
|
|
Ms.
Elizabeth M.
Knight
|
1984
|
|
Mrs.
Elizabeth M.
Morgan
|
1985-1986
|
|
Dr.
William A.
Baranick
|
1987-1996
|
|
Ms. Mary
J. Wilson
|
1997-1998
|
|
Ms.
Joanne M.
Busalacchi
|
1999-2001
|
|
Ms.
Peggy Salazar
|
2001-
present
|
|
Return
to Oak
View Home Page
|