Anaheim High is kicking off the school’s 125th anniversary with a Oct. 1 Homecoming All-Class Reunion from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. on the historic Colonist campus. [Read more…]
THE ANAHEIM COLONISTS – An American Football History – On Sale Now!
THE ANAHEIM COLONISTS – An American Football History
The Anaheim Colonists have established a proud football tradition for more than a century, setting the precedent which many successful football programs follow to this day. Now, the memories and experiences that forged a gridiron legend have been brought together in THE ANAHEIM COLONISTS – An American Football History. This is the definitive chronicle of Orange County’s most historic football program.
* Exclusive commentary and memories from dozens of former players, coaches, opponents, fans and boosters
* Rare and never-before-seen photographs chronicling more than 100 years of Anaheim Colonists football
* Complete all-time team records, season-by-season results, extensively researched
* Foreword by Jim Fassel, former Anaheim quarterback and NFL Coach of the Year with the New York Giants
Written by Dennis Bateman
Edited by Thomas Bateman
Published by the Anaheim High School Alumni Association
Printed by Advanced Imaging
Cover Art by Annie Salness
Price: $30.00 (+$10 shipping) – All proceeds benefit the Anaheim High School Alumni Association, a 501c3 non-profit organization.
The book will also be sold at home football games and other alumni events.
To order and pay by check, download and fill out this form and mail with your payment to AHSAA, P.O. Box 389, Anaheim, CA 92815
To order using a credit card payment, please fill out the form below. Questions may be directed to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com.
Anaheim Colonists Book
This form to purchase the book "THE ANAHEIM COLONISTS – An American Football History"
2022 AHS Reunions
Class of 1962 – 60th Reunion – Saturday, October 1, 2022 – 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm. Contact robertahess@verizon.net
Class of 1972 – 50th Reunion – Saturday, October 1, 2022
Class of 1992 – 30th Reunion – Saturday, October 1, 2022
Class of 1977 – 45th Mini-reunion – Saturday, October 8, 2022
Class of 1964 – 58th Mini-reunion – Friday, October 21, 2022
Homecoming Game: Friday, September 30, 2022 @ 7P (La Palma Park, Glover Stadium). (Get there early to get your ticket, seat and visit).
Homecoming Reunion – AHS Campus 9A-12P -Saturday, October 1, 2022
Class of ’24 Colonist Connection to Famous Rose Parade
Thanks to the donation a scrapbook by a relative of Class of 1924 graduate Abigail Francis “Frankie” Reed, the AHS Alumni Association has learned about an important Colonist connection to the famous California Rose Parade.
Back in the late 1880s, Frankie’s mother, Grace (Monroe) Reed, who grew up in Pasadena, started the New Year’s tradition of a carriage parade and picnic on New Year’s Day with her friends and family.
This group became the Valley Hunt Club and the parade became the famous Rose Parade. Grace made sure her family followed the tradition and Frankie became a eager participant of the parade throughout her life.
Here is Frankie’s biography as provided by her granddaughter, Melody Lavrakas, daughter of “Frankie’s daughter, Dorothy Suzanne Ballantyne.
Abigail Francis Reed – Class of 1924
Abigail Francis Reed attended Anaheim Union High School between 1920 and 1924. She was never called Abigail and went by her middle name of Francis. By age 1 year, family members shortened it to Frankie.
Her sister Ruth Reed was the academic of the family and a member of the school’s award winning debate team. Francis found it hard to keep up with sister, as she was more of an athlete and adventurer. She took drama classes throughout high school. In her freshman year she acted in “The Thirteenth Chair” and in a vaudeville production in her senior year.
She was a member of the swim team her junior and senior years and competed in the 20- and 40-yard meets. She was a strong swimmer and loved the ocean and swimming in it.
She loved parties and attended all the dances and plays. Her scrapbook is filled with mementoes from all her school activities.
Frankie grew up “very much a tomboy,” according to a letter written to the AHS Alumni Association by her granddaughter, who related that Frankie’s mother wrote that she was “born in a hurry and has been rushing ahead ever since.”
A. Francis Reed was born January 1905 in Los Alamitos to John Oren Reed and Grace Monroe Reed. They met in Pasadena, where Grace lived and attended Throup Polytechnic Institute, later known as Cal Tech.
John worked for J. Ross Clark Sugar Co. in Los Alamitos as a sugar boiler. Their first child Ruth was born in 1902. A second child, Dorothy, was born in 1903, but only lived 12 days. Frankie was born in January 1905, and Marjory was born in August 1906. The family moved to Portland, Oregon in 1907 to be near his parents.
Working on his father’s apple orchard didn’t suit John, nor did the primitive living conditions. In 1908 they moved back to California and bought a 20-acre ranch in Anaheim on Lincoln Avenue. This is where Frankie grew up and attended local schools. Her only brother, Donald Monroe Reed, was born on the ranch in 1908.
The Reeds were a close-knit family and did everything together. On weekends, they traveled to Orange County Park (now Irvine Park) for picnics. Balboa Island and Laguna Beach were their favorite swim spots. Another family activity was attending band concerts in Long Beach.
On New Year’s they took their carriage to Pasadena to join friends and family for the annual carriage parade and picnic. Grace and friends started this tradition back in the late 1880s. This group became the Valley Hunt Club and the parade became the famous Rose Parade.
The family was prospering and the original ranch house on Lincoln was torn down and a new house with “nine large rooms and two bathrooms” was built in 1909. In 1913, they bought their first car, a Studebaker, and Grace was one of the few women who drove. Frankie learned to drive while she was still in school.
As a teenager, Frankie helped the Knott’s children sell jam from the family fruit stand. Frankie was a Jobs Daughter debutant at age 16.
When she graduated from Anaheim High, she was accepted at California Berkley, where her sister Ruth was attending. She attended for two years and then was asked to leave as her interest in learning was lacking. Her interest in boys was intact, and she met her husband, Thomas Scott Ballantyne from San Diego, while at Cal Berkley. Her father insisted that they wait until she was 21 to marry.
In 1926, John and Grace sold their ranch and built a large house at 2467 N. Riverside Drive in Anaheim. Frankie and Tom’s wedding was held in the backyard.
The young couple moved to El Cajon, where he managed various ranches and worked for the state as an agricultural inspector. They had three children: Thomas Reed, Robert Monroe, and Dorothy Suzanne. Tom died in September 1950. Frankie remarried to Walter A. Lucas in 1953 and moved to Winnemucca, Nevada. They returned to California and lived in Long Beach until divorcing in 1967.
Frankie lived in Long Beach for the rest of her life. She worked for AARP and P.O.E. as a secretary until she retired. Frankie passed away in 1971.
All her life, Frankie was adventurous and loved going places and doing things. After she left college, she toured the United States with her mother for four months. After her divorce, she traveled to Europe for four months. But she always came back home to California and the ocean she loved.
AHSAA Position Statement on Colonist Mascot
Click here to read the position statement on the Colonist mascot published by the AHS Alumni Association: TO ALL ANAHEIM COLONISTS
TO ALL ANAHEIM COLONISTS . . .
At the behest of the Anaheim Union High School District, the 2021-22 Anaheim High School (AHS) student body will be engaging in a civic inquiry regarding the Colonist mascot. This civics exercise is the result of a petition demanding that the mascot name be changed due to it being offensive to indigenous people.
The Anaheim High School Alumni Association (AHSAA) respects the history of America’s indigenous people, and specifically, the Tongva people, who originally inhabited the area we grew up in, as they are an important and essential part of Anaheim’s history that has long been overlooked.
As the first city to incorporate in what is now Orange County, Anaheim has been known as the “Mother Colony” since its founding, a recognition of the German farmers and vintners who established their wine growing colony by the Santa Ana River in 1857. Six and a half decades later, when the students at Anaheim Union High School voted to choose a mascot for their sports teams, they chose “Colonists”, as they wanted to proudly represent their home, the “Mother Colony” … the City of Anaheim.
The contention that the name “Colonists” was chosen by Anaheim High students to celebrate or commemorate the conquest and genocide of native people, is factually inaccurate and fundamentally wrong. Any attempt to insert a retroactive redefinition of our name to ascribe hateful, brutal, and violent acts committed by people who have no connection whatsoever to Anaheim is insulting and abhorrent to anyone who has been proud to call themselves an Anaheim Colonist. This goes against every ideal of conscientious and responsible citizenship and respect that generations of Anaheim Colonists have been taught by their teachers and coaches and demonstrated in the halls, classrooms, gyms, and athletic fields of Anaheim High School.
For the first 60 years of its existence, Anaheim Union High School was the only high school in the city. The students and graduates of “Old AU” created the proud Colonist tradition, one we alumni have always sought to live up to. Generations of students of all ethnic backgrounds have been proud to call themselves Anaheim Colonists, passing from mothers and fathers to their sons and daughters, and from sisters and brothers and cousins down through the years.
Over ten years ago, proud Anaheim alumni, steeped in that Colonist tradition, gathered together to form the Anaheim High School Alumni Association, which to date, has raised and donated approximately $500,000 to support the current students of AHS. Our beloved “Old AU”, which we alumni often call “the Colony”, is more than a school, it is a home, it is a family. It’s where we came together with others to build and be part of something great, whether it was a campus club, playing on great sports teams, performing in the band, or just being with friends. We are proud of that history and tradition; and calling ourselves an Anaheim Colonist is a reminder of that.
Being an Anaheim Colonist is more than just a name, it’s our heritage, and it’s part of who we are. Other schools have generic mascots shared with hundreds of other high schools in the country, but being a Colonist is something unique and special to being from Anaheim High School. We are proud to be Anaheim Colonists and we stridently and steadfastly oppose any effort to take that name away from us and from future Colonists of our beloved “Old AU”.
ONCE A COLONIST, ALWAYS A COLONIST!
Evolution of the Anaheim Colonist Mascot
By the time Anaheim’s Central School was built and began holding high school classes in 1898, sports teams were being formed and cross-town rivalries were quickly established.
In 1900, football begins with the first recorded game played against Fullerton at Anaheim on Nov. 6. Anaheim wins 2-0. Local sports reporters began referring to Anaheim High teams as the “Mother Colonists.”
It wasn’t until November 1922 that an official mascot name was selected by Anaheim High’s staff and student body. In a spirited contest, the three top name choices were the “Homers,” “Pioneers,” and “Colonists.”
The school newspaper reported “At first the name “Homers” vied with “Colonists” in popularity. “Pioneers” was also popular. But “Colonists” was the final choice as the appropriate, dignified name for the representatives of the “Mother Colony.”
While the name was select, there was no visual depiction of the Colonist mascot until Principal Joseph Clayes, a talented artist who first joined the school staff as a teacher of art and commerce, designed the first logo of a pilgrim profile embedded in the book-topped laurel wreath.
The Colonist logo first appeared on page 2 of the 1928 yearbook with a copyright notation. The Colonist pilgrim logo made its initial appearance on a yearbook cover the following year.
Prior to Claye’s design, the school’s logo (or crest) was a laurel wreath, topped by an open book, surrounding the school’s initials of AUHS. (Initially, the school’s name was Anaheim Union High School. Union was dropped in the 1960-61 school year as Anaheim was no longer the only high school in the district.
At some point, the Colonist mascot was named “Clem.” Then a “Connie Colonist” came on the scene.In the 1960s,
Clem Colonist took on a whole new look, resembling the City of Anaheim’s “Andy” mascot, which was designed by a Disney artist. While no documentation has been found to support this for the Anaheim High logo, the style certainly supports the claim. This mascot design has Clem leaning on a blunderbuss, a gun often associated with the Plymouth Colony Pilgrims.
In 1970, Vice Principal Gary Lindell created the Colonist shield logo, which is probably the most well-known design. It incorporates the tag line “Home of Champions,” reflecting the school’s numerous sports championships.
Yet another design, the “charging mascot,” was introduced in the 2000s. This logo is attributed to the Super Bowl success enjoyed by the New England Patriots. Many high school teams across the country began using variations of the “Patriot” logo. Anaheim followed this trend with a design that has the Colonist mascot charging with an AHS-adorned flag. (This is standard clip art with the AHS or Colonist name inserted and not an originally crafted design.)
Just two years away from the school’s 125th anniversary, the evolution of the logo design continues.
2021 Reunions
Class of 1955 – 66th reunion, Saturday, October 9, 2021 – Respond by September 9, 2021 anaheimalumni@yahoo.com
Class of 1954 – 67th – Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021 – RSVP by October 1st auhs54reunion@aol.com
Class of 1970 – 50th +1 – Friday, Oct. 22, 2021 – Anaheimhs1970@gmail.com
Class of 1954 Reunion
AUHS Class of 1954 – 67th Reunion – Sunday, Oct. 10, 2021 – 2p – 5p
As we have all learned, especially lately, this event might change due to COVID restrictions and other events not in our control which we will of course let you know.
We have reserved a banquet room and separate checks will be available for your convenience. There is no payment due.
Please, let me know if you and your guest will be joining us!!
Please let me know!!
RSVP by October 1st
auhs54reunion@aol.com
Many thanks to Dorothy Addy Ranalli, Renny Wallace Hauswald and Maryanne Hammatt Leckie!!!
Gania Demaree Trotter – Feb. 17, 1927 – April 19, 2021
Anaheim High Class of 1944 alumna Gania Demaree Trotter died peacefully at home in the loving presence of her family members. Gania’s father, Dr. Paul H. Demaree, was principal of Anaheim Union High School from 1941 to 1954. In 2014, Gania established an endowed scholarship in her father’s name that has been awarded since to graduating Colonists.
Gania stayed close with her classmates, including her best friend, Kathryn (Gauer) Kopitzke. Friends going back to kindergarten at Horace Mann Elementary School, together they attended the YMCA’s Camp Oceola, worked as soda jerks at Jackson Drug Store and as waitresses at Knott’s Berry Farm.
While a student at Anaheim High, Gania was president of Girls’ League and the Girls’ Reserve. She also was a member of the school choir and an honor student.
Gania returned to her alma mater for a short time in the 1950s to serve as choral director. She also served as a guest speaker in 2019 for “The Poston Experience – Paving the Way for the Next Generations.” Presented in Cook Auditorium, the event was a rare opportunity to witness the testimony of Anaheim’s Japanese families who were incarcerated in camps during WWII.
Dr. Demaree was principal at Anaheim High during WWII when 50 students of Japanese descent were forced to leave their homes and relocate to the camps. Poignant in that Demaree was born in Japan to missionary parents, he was especially vocal in speaking out against discrimination toward Japanese-Americans, a courageous position to take considering the war fervor at the time.
As a musician and choral director, an arts development administrator, a political activist, and a devoted friend, Gania’s energetic intellect and vibrant personality enriched the lives of every person and community she encountered.
Gania grew up in Southern CA and earned a degree in choral music from Occidental College (1949) and a MA in Education from Columbia Teachers College (1952). She married the Rev. Dr. F. Thomas Trotter in 1953 and helped him establish Montclair Methodist Church in 1956.
In their 66 years of marriage, they supported each other through a wide array of professional and personal adventures in the service of many communities and callings. They were a loving, supportive and inspiring presence to their children and many extended family members.
In her university days, Gania studied choral music with Howard Swan and sang with Robert Shaw. Later, she was director of Choral Music at John Muir College. In the 1960s and 70s, she directed other choral groups, including the adult and youth choirs at Claremont UMC.
After moving to Nashville, TN in 1973, Gania devoted much of her energy to volunteer work in education and social services. She was a principal architect of a group whose work established major reforms in Nashville’s public schools. She was an active member of West End UMC, singing in the chancel choir and serving on many committees that shaped the congregational life. Professionally, her work as Director of Development for Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music enabled Gania to merge her love for music, education and community outreach.
In 1988, Gania and Tom moved to Anchorage, where Tom was President of Alaska Pacific University, and Gania built up the school’s development program. During this time, Gania and Tom were also deeply engaged in the founding and development of Africa University, a Pan-African and United Methodist-related institution in Mutare, Zimbabwe.
After retiring in 1995, Gania returned to work as Director of Development for Claremont School of Theology (1999-2001). In her post-retirement years, Gania remained active in political, environmental and arts groups, and held leadership and service positions at Mount San Antonio Gardens.
In 2017, she published her memoirs: a book cherished by many family members and friends. Gania is survived by her children, Ruth Elizabeth Trotter (Brett Watterson), Tania Trotter Batson (Greg Batson) and Mary Kathleen Trotter (Robert Kaufman); grand-children Thomas, Daniel and Wesley Batson; step-grandchildren Travis Watterson (Meetra), Ryan Watterson, and Rachel Azevedo (Lucas); and numerous beloved sisters and brothers-in-law, nieces and nephews.
Gania was predeceased by her husband Tom, parents Paul Holland and Mary Sunnen Demaree, siblings Kay Bean, Ruth Preston and Daniel Demaree, and daughter Paula Anne.