2019 Colony Classic Car Show

The historic Anaheim High Campus  came alive  for the 2019 Colony Classic Car Show on Saturday, Oct. 19. ! The roar of engines, classic rock music and good conversation among fellow Colonists and classmates (some who hadn’t returned since graduating decades ago) filled the entire central court yard and surrounding open spaces.  (Photos from the day are included in the slide show below. )

Presented by the Anaheim High School Alumni Association, under the direction of Board Member Debbie Vidana, this Colonist celebration raised funds for the AHSAA “Spirit Award” scholarship program. Last year the Alumni Association awarded $16,500 in scholarships and, over the past decade, has given back  more than $300,000 to Anaheim High.

The Colony Classic Car Show also provided an opportunity for school clubs and programs to raise funds, while meeting Anaheim High alumni nnd hosting their neighbors, family and friends.

Along with viewing close to 100 classic cars — many owned by AHS graduates — attendees enjoyed memorabilia from the school’s 121-year history, food provided by the Anaheim Lions Club and Case Garcia Restaurant, a silent auction with fantastic prizes, many provided by City of Anaheim Councilmembers, performances by the award-winning AHS Cheer Team, and an awards ceremony with hand-crafted trophies presented to 10 classic car owners.

Winners included Best of Show winners Clint and Renee Breads for their 1937 Olds Club Coupe; Best Pre-50’s, Robert Neamy (’63), 1928 Ford Sedan; Best 60’s, Harry Rieger, 1963 Corvette Sting Ray; Best Foreign, Richard Roland, 1968 VW Karmen Ghia; Best Truck, Tony Messick, 1966 Chevy C-10 Fleetside; Best Design, Ruben Luna, 1957 Chevy Belair; Best Low-Rider, Chuy Barrera, 1960 Chevy Impala; Principal’s Choice, Clint Stark (’59), 1940 Ford Woodie; Alumni Choice, Rod Dixon, 1932 Ford 3W Coupe; People’s Choice, Basil Dahl (’58), 1959 Chevy S/W.

Without community and alumni support, the Car Show would not be possible. Extra thanks to CHAMPION  sponsors Anaheim Public Utilities and the Fisher and Vary Families; LEGACY  sponsors Anaheim Firefighters Association, Paul Kott Realtors represented by Jackie Garibay, and former AHSAA president and founding member Gerald Woodward (’59).

COLONY & TROPHY sponsors included  Anaheim’s new Raising Cane’s, Scott (”73) & Janet Brown (’77), Patti Hirahara (’73) and Jimmy Oregel (’72). Thank you to all and enjoy these photos from the  8th AHSAA Colony Classic Car Show!

Anaheim High Remembers Japanese Students Displaced by WWII

The story of Japanese students ,who were unable to complete their education at Anaheim Union High School (AUHS) due to their forced relocation to WWII incarceration camps, was remembered by more than 800 attendees of an Aug. 24 event at  Cook Auditorium.

“The Poston Experience – Paving the Way for the Next Generations”  provided a rare opportunity to witness the testimony of  Anaheim families who were incarcerated in the camps, including the mother and father of AUHS District Superintedent Mike Matsuda.

The program included remarks from special guest speaker Gania Demaree-Trotter, a 1944 graduate whose father, Dr. Paul H. Demaree, was principal of Anaheim Union High School from 1941 to 1954. Her speech garnered a standing ovation.

Attendees also viewed a documentary film presentation about the Shigekawa family, Anaheim pioneers who were represented by AHS Class of 1962 graduate Marlene Shigekawa. Marlene  is president of the Poston Community Alliance and is active in preserving the legacy of the Poston, Arizona, camp where she was born.

Other panelists included Don Miyada, a WWII Congressional Gold Medal and Professor Emeritus of Clinical Chemistry at the University of California Irvine;  Korean War veteran Robert M. Wada, a trailblazer in the Orange County Japanese American community; and Tom Leatherman, a  representative of the National Park Service Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program.

This unknown chapter  of Anaheim High’s history had never been featured in a major educational event until now, according to Patti Hirahara, a Class of ’73 AHS grad who was the event coordinator and moderator. To heighten the learning experience,  Patti  included a musical backdrop for the event that featured recordings of  songs from the Poston era performed by Anaheim Elementary School District children and popular tunes from the 1940s sang by the Anaheim High Las Sirenas Advanced Women’s Choir. The event also included a production by the AHS Dance Team entitled “Cherry Blossom.”

In addition, a new and original 10 minute documentary produced by the Anaheim Union High School District Summer Film Academy students entitled, “Remember Us: An Historic Chapter at Anaheim High School,” made its debut at “The Poston Experience” program.

In conjunction with the Anaheim High event, a City of Anaheim’s new original exhibition – “I Am An American – Japanese Incarceration in a Time of  Fear,” will run from Aug. 25 through Nov. 3 at the Muzeo Museum & Cultural Center.

Here are photos from the Aug. 24 event at Anaheim High:

Educational Program by Anaheim High Alumni Designed to Preserve the Legacy of Relocated Japanese American Families

The story of Japanese and American-born students of Japanese ancestry, who were unable to complete their education at Anaheim Union High School due to their forced relocation to WWII incarceration camps, will be remembered as part of  Aug. 24 admission-free event at Cook Auditorium.

Anaheim High graduates organizing “The Poston Experience – Paving the Way for the Next Generations” say this unique program will illustrate how the stories of minority students from 75 years ago are strikingly similar to experiences faced by many of today’s generation.

The 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. program will offer a rare opportunity to hear special guest speaker Gania Demaree-Trotter, a 1944 graduate whose father, Dr. Paul H. Demaree, was principal of Anaheim Union High School from 1941 to 1954.

Cook Auditorium was a second home for Gania, who was a performing arts student and, later, a music teacher at her alma mater. Her return to the Cook stage is an occasion being celebrated and embraced by Anaheim High alumni, especially her students from the 1950s.

To preserve the legacy of these Japanese and Japanese-American students, the majority of whom were sent to Poston, Arizona, this two-hour program will feature Orange County leaders who went to Poston during WWII, as well as a special presentation about an Anaheim pioneer family represented by AHS Class of 1962 graduate Marlene Shigekawa. Marlene will talk about her family and her work in preserving the legacy of the Poston, Arizona camp where she was born.

Other panelists include Don Miyada, Robert M. Wada, and Tom Leatherman, who is representing the National Park Service Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program.

This unknown chapter has never been featured in a major educational event until now, according to Patti Hirahara, a Class of ’73 AHS grad who is the event coordinator and moderator.

To heighten the learning experience, recordings of  songs from the Poston era and popular tunes from the 1940s will provide a musical backdrop for the event. Performers include Anaheim Elementary School District children and the Anaheim High Las Sirenas Advanced Women’s Choir.

In addition, a new and original 10 minute documentary produced by the Anaheim Union High School District Summer Film Academy students entitled, “Remember Us: An Historic Chapter at Anaheim High School, will make its debut at “The Poston Experience” program.

For a nominal fee, persons who attend the August 24th morning program will be given an opportunity to be part of a sneak preview of the City of Anaheim’s new original exhibition – “I Am An American – Japanese Incarceration in a Time of  Fear,” which will run from Aug. 25 through Nov. 3 at the Muzeo Museum & Cultural Center.

For further information e-mail: anaheimalumni@yahoo.com or phone: (714) 392-2103. The event can also be found on Facebook @AZPostonAHS.

History of Anaheim High School Band and Pageantry

Click on the link below for an historic timeline on the AHS Band. Scroll down to see a gallery of photos (more to come!) and there’s also a link to hear the AHS Band.

History

Click here to hear the band!

A History of Clayes Stadium – 1927-2017

Anaheim High’s Clayes Stadium served as more than just a place to sit and watch Colonist football, soccer games, track meets, graduations, band performances and other events.

Under the steps of the 1000-seat concrete grandstand built in November 1927 for $13,000, were dressing and storage rooms, lockers, a heating plant for showers and offices for the coaches. More recent additions included a batting cage.

Named after Anaheim’s longest serving principal, Joseph A. Clayes, the stadium evolved into an iconic structure. Along with a training facility below and above (generations of Anaheim athletics ran the stadium steps) and a place from which Colonist fans cheered on their teams, the grandstand also served as a vehicle for expressing class pride.

At some point during the stadium’s 90-year history, the tradition of painting the stadium surfaced. An upper classman privilege, painting the stadium became so much a part of becoming a senior that it was looked upon as a small infraction (provided of course that it is done in good taste) to NOT paint your class numbers in blue and gold on the stadium steps. Being a part of the paint crew for these secret evening sessions is a favorite memory of many Anaheim grads.

Construction of the stadium in 1927 on the west side of school’s newly laid out athletic field rounded out what the local newspaper called “the most completely equipped athletic plant,” and the stadium “one of the few of its kind in use on a Southern California school campus.”

Principal Clayes began his tenure at Anaheim High as a teacher of art and commerce in 1914. He became Anaheim High’s principal in the fall of 1919 and remained in that position for 22 years until his death on July 1, 1941. He son and grandsons became some of Anaheim’s most accomplished leaders and athletes.

During his 22-year tenure, Principal Clayes oversaw the complete reconstruction of the school after being destroyed by the 1933 Long Beach earthquake. Along with the main building, auditorium, gymnasium, athletic fields and stadium, a new swimming pool was constructed in the 1920s and later replaced in the 1940s.

The stadium was condemned in recent years and the pool was emptied more than 10 years ago, both due to structural damage. With community support, including that of Anaheim alumni, the District is undertaking a major renovation of the school’s athletic facilities, including the construction of a new aquatics center and improvements to the gymnasium and fields.

Construction plans require the demolition of Clayes stadium, the oldest existing structure on the campus. Ground breaking for the new center will take place March 1, 2018, with construction expected to be complete by March 21, 2019.

If you would like to serve on a planning committee for the grand opening and an effort to raise funds for the athletic fields upgrade, or if you would like to make a tax-deductible donation toward the project, please contact the AHSAA at anaheimalumni@yahoo.com.

Click this link to view a gallery of photos and articles about historic Clayes Stadium.

A History of Anaheim Principals

The first regular high school classes were held on the second floor of Central School beginning in 1898.

The appointment of Anaheim High’s first alumnus principal has inspired the Alumni Association to take a closer look at the men and women who have filled this top position going back to 1869.

Robert Saldivar, a Class of ’96 graduate, is Anaheim High’s newest principal and its first alumnus to fill that position.

He follows in the footsteps of 23 other men and woman who have led the high school, starting with James Miller Guinn in 1869.

The featured photo is of Joseph A. Clayes at his desk. He is Anaheim High’s longest serving principal, the creator of the Colonist logo, was instrumental in establishing the City of Anaheim Parks and Recreation program. His son and two grandsons all graduated from Anaheim high.

Click here to see a complete list of Anaheim principals and view available photos and bios.

Click below to see a gallery of available photos:

Gallery of AHS Principals

Sources: AHSAA Archives, Anaheim Library Heritage Center, “One To Twenty-Eight – A History of the Anaheim Union High School District” by Louise Booth, Natural History Museum Foundation, Los Angeles County, WorldCat record id: 23250333, and the description of Papers of James Miller Guinn, 1824-1918 (bulk 1870-1918),Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens, WorldCat record id: 299167713.

A History of Anaheim High

A HISTORY OF ANAHEIM (UNION) HIGH SCHOOL

Pride of the Colony – Built on Tradition

Anaheim High School, first established in 1898,  is the oldest of nine comprehensive high schools in the Anaheim Union High School District. It is the third oldest high school in Orange County, behind Santa Ana (1889) and Fullerton Union High School (1893).

Following is a timeline of the formation of Anaheim High, from its humble beginnings in an crude adobe structure to a clapboard, then brick, then a columned “Crown of the Colony” Greek Revival, to its current art deco building.

ANAHEIM HIGH SCHOOL TIMELINE

1859 – Soon after the first German colonists arrive, they petition the Los Angeles County superintendent to establish a school in Anaheim, their new home by the Santa Ana River.

1860 – Anaheim’s first school opens in an adobe building located on a lot owned by August Langenberger, a prominent merchant and colony leader. The first teacher is Fred William Kuelp. His initial nine students are: Carola, Regina and Fred Langenberger; Elmina and Louise Lorenz; Pifanio and Antonio Burruel; and Tomas and Felipe Yorba.

1862 – One hundred dollars, paid in pure gold, purchases one of Anaheim’s original city lots for a new adobe school house. The new building is destroyed shortly thereafter by flood. Classes are moved to the second story of the Langenberger building and later moved again back to the adobe where classes were first held. This building is also occupied by the Anaheim Water Co. and a third room of this building served as the town jail. The school master was also the town’s notary public and justice of the peace.

1867 – Anaheim School District is formed.

1869 –  Anaheim’s first teacher Fred William Kuelp resigns due to ill health. He is replaced by Carl Van Gulpen, who is replaced shortly thereafter by James Miller Guinn, a Civil War Veteran who becomes known as the “Father of Anaheim” education.

1870 –  The first monthly report of Anaheim students lists an enrollment of 91 students, divided into two departments (Primary and Grammar) and taught by two teachers. The town’s population at this time is estimated at 1,000.

1871 –  The first school exhibit is staged with a program of declamations, dialogues, farces, tableaux and music. By charging a fee for this first open house, Guinn is able to purchase charts and an outline map for the school. Guinn also establishes the first final examination dates, which included an oral exam that was open to the public.

1874 –  Guinn, a graduate of Oberlin College in Ohio, serves as teacher and principal, offering subjects for high school diploma and classifies students into grades. His 20 pupils attend school in an adobe building with one window, empty boxes and benches for seats and crudely constructed tables for desks.

1877 –  A plot of land 231 Chartres Street is purchased for a new school building at the cost of $1,500.

1878 – Guinn writes and champions a bond to construct a new school building, raising $10,000. When the bill is passed by the legislature on March 12, 1878, it marks the first time ever in California that a school district uses a bond issue to finance new school facilities.

1879 – The new two-story Central School, called the “handsomest school building in the country outside of Los Angeles,” opens on January 16. The school, which features as clock steeple and bell tower, is built in the center of a two-acre lot at 231 Chartres Street. The 217 elementary through high school students are taught by two men and two women who are paid $75 a month.

1880 –  Matilda Rimpau, daughter of Anaheim pioneer Theodore Rimpau, is the first student in the Anaheim school system to earn a high school diploma.

1869-1881 – James M. Guinn

1881 – Guinn resigns his position as teacher and principal to become Los Angeles Superintendent of Schools. From the time of his resignation through 1898, there are no high school classes taught in Anaheim.

1898 – High school classes officially begin on the second floor of Central School after C.P. Evans, principal of Loara Elementary School, convinces the school board that classes should extend past the ninth year. Evans becomes principal and, assisted by Miss Helen French, they teach a student body of 39 student, 17 boys and 22 girls in grades nine through twelve.

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.”

1901 – When Central School becomes overcrowded, citizens fund a $12,500 bond measure to buy land, build a separate high school building and equip it. Anaheim’s first high school, an imposing brick structure, is constructed on south side of Lincoln (then Center), between Harbor and Citron. Principal Fred G. Athearn over sees seven teaches. Central School’s first seven graduates are: Edith Bannerman, Alma Mills, Dora Snyder, John Dauser, Bernard Snyder, Bowman Merritt and Welborn Wallop.

1902 –  The high school’s first literary effort, The Stentorian, is published in February and sold for 50 cents per year. The first issue shows a photo of the faculty and the graduating class of 1902: Arthur G. Baker, Carl Zeus, Olga Boege and Ruth D. EnReal. The first meeting of the Anaheim High Girl’s Athletic Association (GAA) is held on Oct. 5.

1905 – Principal J.F. Walker oversees a student body of 79 students.

 1908 – Citizens unite to form Anaheim Union High School District. AUHSD becomes the largest union school district in California, covering 46 square miles.  Students feed into Anaheim junior highs from Anaheim, Cypress, La Palma, Stanton, Los Alamitos, Rossmoor and portions of Garden Grove, Orange, Fullerton and Buena Park. Anaheim High is joined in the District by Loara District and, by petition, Magnolia District.

1910 – The student body is outgrowing Central School. There’s demand for more room, as well as for a richer course of study. An auditorium and rooms for manual training and domestic science are added. Physical education is added to the curriculum. Up to this time, the curriculum consists of math, English, Latin, German, biology, chemistry, and history.

1911 – Music and commercial subjects were added to the curriculum. Principal Walker teaches science while overseeing 10 teachers. Voters approve a $150,000 bond to purchase 11 acres a half block from existing school site at the northeast corner of Lincoln (then Center) and Citron. Construction of a Greek Revival high school begins and, within the year, a group of six buildings is erected.

The school building at 608 W. Center (now Lincoln) is sold to the elementary school district for $25,000. The building is demolished in 1937 to make way for the construction of Fremont Junior High, which was closed in 1979 and demolished in 1980.

1912 – New Greek-revival Anaheim Union High School is dedicated and graduates its first class of 17 students. By the following year, almost 200 had earned a high school diploma from the school’s combined campuses.

1918 – Class of 1918 becomes the first to wear caps and gowns at graduation.

1919  – The school adopts a logo (or crest) of a laurel wreath, topped by an open book, with the school’s initials AUHS appearing in the center of the wreath. This design appears on the cover of the 1919 yearbook.

1920s – Music education begins with teacher Joshua Williams giving free lessons in an effort to assemble a complete orchestra. He continued this practice over three decades.

1920 – March 19 of this year Volume 1, Edition 1 of the Anaheim High School newspaper is published. The paper was 7 ½ inches-by-10 inches. It not only contained news pertaining to the school, but also included a Chinese student directory, news on the Russian Bolshevik movement, and a United Press story on new games being played by girls and boys.

1921 – In November of this year an official mascot name is 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: “Colonists was the final choice as the appropriate, dignified name for the representatives of the “Mother Colony.”

1924 – First high school swimming pool in Orange County opens on the AHS  campus.

1927Clayes Stadium in constructed and, at some point in the school’s history, is named after Joseph Clayes, Anaheim High’s longest serving principal. The athletic field is called Clayes Field. Painting the stadium with class years becomes a Colonist tradition.

1928  – Principal Joseph Clayes, 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 new Colonist logo appears on page 2 of the 1928 yearbook with a copyright notation.

1929 – The Colonist pilgrim logo appears on the yearbook cover.

1933 – Long Beach earthquake irreparably damages AUHS, requiring its demolition. Construction begins on a new art deco administration building as part of the Work Projects Administration (WPA) project #8291.

1936 – A new art deco AUHS main building, library and auditorium are dedicated.

 

1937 –  A sunken garden and fountain in school’s central patio is created.

1939 – The Class of 1940 football team wins the Sunset League Championship.

1940 – Robert Morton theater organ installed in Cook Auditorium, and a new swimming pool replaces its 1924 predecessor.

1950 – Beginning of the coach Clare Van Hoorebeke’s legendary football era, which endured through 1972.

1953 – Anaheim High’s first drill team is formed and is coached by Helen Gruenfelder.

1956 – On Dec. 14, Anaheim Colonists tie the Downey Vikings in the CIF Southern Section title game at the LA Memorial Coliseum. Considered the most highly attended high school football game in California history, both teams came into the legendary game undefeated. Unmatched in terms of local interest, young idols and a record-setting crowd, the game is still being celebrated by historians, football fans and alumni from both high schools.

1957 – Western High School opens with students who graduate as seniors in 1960, ending Anaheim’s reign as the city’s only high school. According to Louise Booth’s AUHSD history.

1959 – Anaheim plays Western in football, marking the first time Anaheim played a high school within the same district.

1960s – School district returns Anaheim High to its original name, dropping Union from its title. New buildings are constructed during this time, replacing the remaining pre-earthquake coded buildings.

1960 – On October 16, Anaheim High hosts the NBA world champion Boston Celtics against the new Los Angeles Lakers in an exhibition matchup held in the gymnasium.1964 – New “cereal bowl” fountain replaces sunken garden.

1967The Class of 1968 Varsity Football Team wins the CIF Division AAAA Championship.

1972 – The Art Quad and other buildings are constructed to replace old barracks that had been “temporary” quarters for 15 years.

1977 – “Wimpy’s Stand,” a popular student landmark for several decades, is changed into the Student Activities Office. The building was taken down in 2007.

1997  – Alumni join with the Class of 1997 to plan the school’s 100th anniversary in 1998. It turned out to be a great day with activities all throughout the campus, starting on the athletic field with a ceremony and band performance. The day ended with a musical program presented by AHS alumni and presentations by members of the planning committee.

2008 –  Two new buildings with 49 state-of-the-art classrooms open. Classes begin February 2009.

2009  – In February of this year, Anaheim High graduates established the school’s first federal- and state-recognized non-profit corporation. The mission of the Anaheim High School Alumni Association (AHSAA) is to promote and support opportunities and programs for the benefit of the Anaheim High School students

2009  – On October 10, the AUHSD holds the Grand Re-Opening of Anaheim High celebrating the construction of two new buildings and other campus improvements. The newly formed AHS Alumni Association plays a major role in the dedication ceremony.

2014  – Anaheim High Varsity Soccer Team wins the CIF Division III Southern Section Championship.

2017Robert Saldivar from Class of 1996 becomes the first alumnus to become Principal of Anaheim High School.

2017 – On December 28, demolition of Clayes Stadium begins. Constructed in 1927, it was the oldest structure on the campus at 90 years old.

2018  – Anaheim High School launches a digital newspaper, Anaheim Exclusivo. Previously, Anaheim High’s school newspaper was published from 1920 through the 1990s. For several decades it was named “Anaranco” under advisor Lawrence Quille.

2018 – In October of this year, the Fassel Fitness Center is dedicated by Jim Fassel ’67, in memory of his father, Bud Fassel, Anaheim High’s longtime athletic trainer.  The new state- of-the-art equipment aids in the training of the football team and other athletic teams at Old AU.

2019 – On December 13, the AUHSD unveils the new Jon Urbanchek Aquatics Center, a state-of- the-art facility that includes a swimming pool, offices and new locker rooms. Anaheim High soon debuts a new swim team, the first in 29 years. Shortly thereafter, a water polo team is established, the first since 1991.

2019  – On March 13, the AHS campus is closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Classes are conducted virtually through the rest of the school year. The Class of 2020 graduates with a virtual ceremony, the first in the school’s history

2020 – The Class of 2020-21 continues with virtual learning and the campus remains closed throughout the school year.

2021 – In spring, sports teams are able to practice on campus, but competition starts and stops due to COVID-19 surges. The Class of 2021 is able to graduate in person with only parents attending. The ceremony is held at Western’s Handel Stadium.

2021  – On August 11, classes resume on campus. During the 17 months the campus is closed, the campus receives numerous upgrades. Solar-powered lunch tables are installed for students to charge their devices. A new lunch area and additional benches are added to provide more shaded seating areas for students. The campus is beautified with new murals representing Colonist Spirit, Pride, and Tradition, and the school’s entire exterior receives a fresh coat of paint. Improvements were also made to the athletic fields, and to HVAC, fire alarm and security systems.

Photos: Courtesy of Anaheim Public Library & the AHSAA

References:

“One To Twenty-Eight – A History of Anaheim Union High School District” by Louise Booth

AUHS and AHS yearbooks, especially copy written by Vice Principal Bella J. Walker.

Scrapbooks donated to the AHSAA.

“Anaheim” by Elizabeth J. Schultz and Stephen J. Faessel, a chapter in “A Hundred Years of Yesterdays,” published by the Orange County Historical Commission.

“Anaheim Colonists Football – A Century of Tradition” by Dennis Bateman

Other sources: “Anaheim High (Central School)” by Brad Pettigrew

AHSAA Unearths “Buried” Colonist Treasure

ALEX AND MICKEY AT OC HALL OF FAME GROUND BREAKING

Alex Maese (fourth from left) and Mickey Flynn (far right) were among the outstanding athletes who helped break ground at the Angel Stadium for the OC Sports Hall of Fame.

A series of happy coincidences has led to the recovery of a treasure trove of Colonist memorabilia, including items belonging to legendary Anaheim High football coach Clare Van Hoorebeke. These highly prized relics will be displayed for the first time in nearly 20 years at the Feb. 15 AHSAA 7th Annual Golf Classic, Dinner and Auction at Western Hills Country Club.

The memorabilia was last viewed by the public at the 7,000-square-foot Orange County Sports Hall of Fame housed at Angel Stadium. The Hall of Fame was forced to close when the Angels were bought by Disney, and the entire contents of the museum – cases, fixtures, boxes of sports memorabilia and more – were being stored at a location near Anaheim High School. [Read more…]