Marion Knott – Class of ’39 – April ’22-Nov. ’14

Marion Knott, the youngest and last surviving child of Knott’s Berry Farm founders Walter and Cordelia Knott, has died at age 92. A graduate in 1939 of Anaheim Union High School, Marion was born in April 1922 on the Buena Park berry farm that would become Knott’s.
In the early days of the farm, Marion Knott was tasked with selling rhubarb at the side of the road. She also served as a waitress with her two sisters in the five-table tea room, where her mother prepared sandwiches, pie and coffee. When her mother introduced chicken dinners in the tea room in 1934, Marion Knott served those up, too.

As her parents aged, she and her three siblings (Virginia ’30, Russell ’33, Toni (Elizabeth) ’34) took over various management positions. Marion became director of design, planning and entertainment and was the one who persuaded the family to put up gates around the park and start charging admission in 1968.
In 1997, the family sold the park to Cedar Fair and Marion didn’t return to the park until 2009 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of Mrs. Knott’s Chicken Dinner Restaurant, where many Anaheim High students worked throughout their high school years and beyond.

After graduating from Anaheim High, where she was a president of the Domecon Club and a member of Girl Reserves, as well as the girls’ golf team, she attended USC, leaving in her junior year to marry.
Marion was also a philanthropist and served on Chapman University’s Board of Trustees. The university’s film school, the Dodge College of Film and Media Arts, named its building Marion Knott Studios after she donated $5 million in 2004 to get it built and later kicked in another $3 million to fill the buildings with film equipment.

Marion Knott is survived by her husband, Anthony Montapert; her son, Darrel Anderson; her daughter, Diane; four grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

 

CHARLES JAMES (JIM) CHAPMAN – 1927 – 2014

CHAPMAN, JIM CLASS OF 1945  Charles James (Jim) Chapman, AUHS Class of 1945, passed away July 18, 2014, of natural causes at his home in Anaheim at the age of 87. Jim was born in Sigourney, Iowa on Jan. 7, 1927. Tired of shoveling snow in Iowa, he moved with his family to Anaheim in 1941.

At age 16, he joined the US Navy where he would spend the next 30 years of his life serving in WW II, the Korean Conflict, and the Vietnam War. His chosen area of Naval service was a Boatswains Mate, one of the oldest and most distinguished rates in the Navy. This rate, however, kept Jim away from his family much of the time, as it was a shipboard deck position so he worked hard and rose to the rate of Senior Chief Boatswain’s Mate, the highest rate in the Navy without being an officer. He was also a Company Commander in San Diego at the Naval Training Center, training young sailors in boot camp and worked as Shore Patrol in Long Beach. After his Naval service and military retirement in 1972, Jim got his real estate and broker’s license and spent the rest of his life in the Orange County area listing and selling property.

In 1948, he married the love of his life Phyllis Ruth (Petey) Hill, also an Anaheim High graduate. They would have been married 66 years on July 21. Jim is survived by his wife, Phyllis; son Mark Chapman of San Clemente and his wife Diane; daughter, Tracie Keough of Yorba Linda and her husband Tom; and his grandson, Mark Keough, also of Yorba Linda. For his last and final deployment, Jim will be buried at sea with full military honors.

 

 

Raymond Gerald Baker – 1918 – 2014

Gerald Baker grad photo

RAYMOND GERALD BAKER
July 30, 1918 – June 18, 2014

Gerald Baker, an AUHS Class of ’36 grad, was born to James A. and MaeBelle Baker on their citrus ranch located on West Broadway near Magnolia St. in Anaheim. He attended Magnolia Elementary School (now Maxwell) where Mattie Lou Maxwell was his teacher and coach.

Gerald married Eleanor Becker in 1939 and they celebrated 55 years of marriage before Eleanor’s passing in 1994.

During World War II, Gerald served in the U.S. Navy and was deployed to the Pacific Fleet, serving on a Minesweeper. He was severely wounded when the ship was sunk near Borneo and was presented The Purple Heart.

Gerald worked for most of his adult life on Signal Hill, Long Beach, in various positions with the oil industry. He was a lifelong member of the Anaheim Christian Church where he served on the Board, taught Sunday school and sang in the choir.

A life-long resident of Anaheim, Gerald came from a family of Colonists. His father, James Baker is an Anaheim graduated who taught at Centralia Elementary in Anaheim in 1912, became the first Superintendent of Schools for the La Habra district and served as an Orange County Supervisor.

Gerald’s uncle Arthur was in Anaheim’s second graduating class (1902), and three of Gerald’s siblings graduated from Anaheim, as did his wife, Eleanor Becker (1937), and their sons, John (1958) and Bob (1959).

(Incidentally, Gerald’s mother, Mae Belle Dickenson Baker, who attended but didn’t graduate from AHS, had a sister who married John King, the writer of Anaheim ’s alma mater.)

While at Anaheim High, Gerald served was senior class vice president, ran track, played baseball, acted in school plays and sang in the Mozart Choir and Boys’ Quartet.

Gerald was preceded in death by his wife, Eleanor and son, John Edward. He is survived by son, Robert Paul; daughter-in-law, Charlene; seven grandchildren and sixteen great grandchildren.

Gerald was a kind gentleman, faithful to God, his family and country; he will be greatly missed by all who love him!

Donald R. Betzsold – Oct. 28,1925 – May 6, 2014

Don Betzold funeral imageDonald R. Betzold 1943Donald Roy Betzsold from AUHS Class of 1943 passed away peacefully at age 88 on May 6, 2014, in Anaheim, where he was born Oct. 28, 1925. Donald lived in Anaheim most of his life except for a brief period in 1938, when he lived in Tacoma, Washington.

While at Anaheim High, Donald was a scholar-athlete, playing baseball and football. In recent years he enjoyed attending the varsity football games with his daughter Robyne Betzsold, a teacher at Anaheim High School.

He met his wife, Ruby Strange, to whom he was married for nearly 70 years, when he was serving in the U.S. Navy in WWII. She died in 2008.

Donald attended Fullerton College and later the University of Southern California, where he received his architectural degree. He worked for Frank Homolka and Associates in Long Beach, designing many Home Savings, as well as buildings at CSU Long Beach and the Belmont Plaza swimming pool for the 1984 Olympics. He also designed several private homes in Orange County.

On a community level, Donald served as president of the Anaheim Historical Society and organized their display at the 100th Anniversary of the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa.

Donald was especially proud of his 65 years in the Elks. He joined the Anaheim Elks with his father and brother. When that Elks closed, Donald moved to the Buena Park Elks Lodge 2046, the “Lodge with a Heart.” He held many positions with the Elks and served as Exalted Ruler from 1995 to 1996.

One of his most rewarding accomplishments was raising funds for Buena Park Junior High’s American Heritage Scholarship Program to send students to visit Washington, D.C. One year he traveled with them. In his last years, Donald kept active with the Elks and visited Walnut Village to help patients enjoy Bingo. He was living at Walnut Village at the time of his death.

Don Betzsold's parents, George and Mary, were owners of Betzsold Studios, a long-time Anaheim business.

Don Betzsold’s parents, George and Mary, were owners of Betzsold Studios, a long-time Anaheim business.

Donald is survived by his daughter, Robyne Betzsold; granddaughter, Jennifer Balsiger; and grandson, Austin Lawrence. He was interned at Anaheim Cemetery.

Wilhelmina G. Van Hunnick – July 27, 1936 – April 29, 2009

One of Anaheim High’s exemplary graduates was Wilhelmina Grace Van Hunnick from Class of 1954.

After graduating 15th in her class at Anaheim High, Willi (as she was known by her friends and family), she attended USC, where she was a business major and member of the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society. She also served as a USC Associate and on the Humanities Committee for Letters, Arts, and Science.

Anaheim was to continue benefitting from this pioneer daughter who returned to her hometown to teach for 32 years in the Anaheim Union High School District. She became a renowned business teacher at John F. Kennedy High School, earning Teacher of the Year three times and Orange County Teacher of the Year.

She served as chairman of Kennedy High Business Department and as an advisor for Future Business Leaders of America, a program with Wilhelmina G. Van Hunnick_NEW_0001which she was involved throughout her high school years. Her service as a student adviser, as well as a member of the organization’s Board of Directors at the state and national level, earned her a place in the FBLA Wall of Fame and the title of California Business Person of the Year.

Along with her passion for teaching, Ms. Van Hunnick loved the performing arts and chaired the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Foundation, helping establish a state-of-the-art auditorium at high school.

Wilhelmina and Elizabeth Van HunnickHer sister, Elizabeth Van Hunnick from Class of 1956, taught at Fremont Junior High School and is a Lifetime Member of the Anaheim High School Alumni Association and has donated many of her and her sister’s AUHS memorabilia items to the Alumni Association’s for preservation.

More about Wilhelmina’s life can be read at:

http://www.kpacfoundation.org/wilhelmina_vanhunnick.html

 

Al Wisser – Class of 1942

Al Wisser from Anaheim High Class of 1942, passed away peacefully with his family by his side on April 11, 2014 at age 89. He is pictured here at the Alumni Breakfast in June 2012 with his three daughters: Carol   ’70 (standing at left), Karen Walters ’72 (seated); and Susan Opperman ’75 (standing at right),
More about his life and his family’s ties to the City of Anaheim and Anaheim High School are included in this story published by the AHSAA in June 2012, titled “Wisser Sporting Goods: A Household Name in Anaheim.”
 
Wisser Sporting Goods A Household Name in Anaheim
As the only high school in Anaheim from 1898 to until 1959, it’s common for multi-generations of the same family to be Colonist graduates. The Wissers, whose roots in Anaheim go back more than 100 years, is one such Colonist family.
Wisser is a well-known name to Anaheim residents who remember their family-run sporting goods store that offered customers a personal relationship, advice and suggestions. The name was so trusted in the community that parents often sent their children to buy a ball glove or a pair of shoes with a blank check.

Opened in 1920, Wisser Sporting Goods operated at 169 Lincoln Ave. for more than 75 years until closing in 1981. The store became an Anaheim icon and was a favorite gathering place for local businessmen and neighboring farmers who came to town to tell tall tales of their fishing and hunting adventures.  One such adventure took place right in the store when one of the mounted taxidermy specimens, a stuffed bobcat, was jarred loose by the 1933 Long Beach earthquake and landed on a startled proprietor.

The store’s connection to the community and to Anaheim High was also realized through other family members, including Marion Wisser Harvey, Class of 1938, and her daughters, Norma Harvey Brown, 1960, and Barbara Harvey, 1968. Other family graduates include: Al’s wife, Jean Allen Wisser, Class of 1948; and Al’s brother Edwin Wisser, Class of 1940.

The popular store evolved from the business dealings of family patriarch Roman Wisser (pronounced Weeser), who first opened a restaurant on Los Angeles Street in Anaheim in 1886. When his cook proved unreliable, Roman sent to San Antonio for Miss Emily Meyers, a young woman he had met while living there. Emily became his bride and helper in the restaurant. They had a son, Lucien “Pete” Wisser, Class of 1907; and three daughters, Mary, Emma (Class of 1917) and Alice (Class of 1921). (Al is Pete’s son.)

Roman and Emily tried opening a saloon in Fullerton, but returned to Anaheim to stay in 1898. They next opened a new saloon in the building at 144 W. Lincoln Ave., a property that later housed Lind Rexall Pharmacy. They called their establishment“Favorite Saloon”and advertised Schlitz beer on draught. The family liquor trade prospered and, in 1906, Roman built a new “Favorite Saloon” across the street at 169 W. Center Street (now Lincoln Avenue).

When Roman died in 1913, Pete took over the business until 1917, then left to serve with the U.S. Army in Europe. Emily ran the saloon until Prohibition in 1918.

Pete returned to Anaheim following World War I and was reunited with his sweetheart, Edna Nichols, a Santa Ana school teacher, whom he married in 1920.

The significant changes in Anaheim during the 1950s, including the arrival of Walt Disney, occurred while Pete Wisser sat on the City Council from 1950 to 1958.

In 1958, blindness caused by a diabetes condition led to his retirement from the Council and the store. Sons Edwin and Allan, who both served in the Navy during World War II, returned in 1946 to join their father in the sporting goods store and, with their sister Marion, continued running the store until downtown redevelopment ended their long run as Anaheim’s favorite sporting goods store.

Check out the following links for more history and photos of the Wisser Family:

Wisser’s Favorite Saloon: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/EarlyAnaheim/saloon.htm

Wisser Sporting Goods: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/Newspaper/Post1950/wisserhistory.htm

Wisser Family Pictures and Documents: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/web/wissers/wisserpictures.htm

Coach Brant Cowser (1925-2014)

BRANT COWSER (September 1925 – March 2014)

Across four decades as a teacher and a coach, Brant Cowser made an indelible contribution to Anaheim High School, and was an important member of the Colonist varsity football and boys basketball programs during the school’s legendary heyday. By every measure, he was Blue & Gold through and through. [Read more…]

Brigadier General Nolan J. Beat, USMC – AUHS Class of 1936

Nolan Beat Military PhotoFormer Colonist and Marine Corps Brigadier General Nolan J. Beat passed away at age 95. He served his country from October 1942 through April 1976. Brigadier General Beat had the distinction of achieving the highest rank of any Colonist to serve in the United States armed forces. He was buried with full military honors at Riverside National Cemetery on Dec. 20, 2014.

During his nearly 34 years of service with the U.S. Marine Corps, Nolan Beat saw tours of duty in WWII, Korea and Vietnam, earning the Legion of Merit with Combat “V” with two Gold Stars, Joint Service Commendation Medal, Navy Commendation Medal with Combat “V” and the Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with a Silver Star. [Read more…]

Ulysses Edward “Ude” Bauer – 1926-2013

UlUde Bauer high school photoysses Bauer, a beloved husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather and friend, passed away peacefully on Nov. 1, 2013, at his home in Forest Falls, CA. Services will be held Tuesday, Nov. 19, 10 a.m., at St. Boniface Catholic Church, followed by internment at Riverside National Cemetery at 2:15 p.m.

Known to family and friends as “Ude,” he was born in Anaheim on March 14, 1926, the eldest of four children of Ulysses F. and Cora (Stoffel) Bauer. While at Anaheim High, Ude was a star athlete and played on the 1943-44 Varsity Football Team that won a co-Sunset League championship. He was also a member of the Colonist Knights. 43-44 football co-champions

When he graduated from Anaheim Union High School in June 1944, the United States was fighting in both the European and Pacific Theaters. He and 13 of his classmates left after graduation ceremonies for the U.S. Navy boot camp in San Diego. [Read more…]

John Kemper and Jackie (Murphy) Kemper – Class of 1941

John Kemper and Jacqueline (Jackie) Murphy met in physics class in their senior year (1941) at Anaheim Union High School.  Their first date was to the Valentine’s Day Dance at AUHS that year.  They became high school sweethearts and were married during WWII in November 1944.  They had 7 children, 20 grandchildren, 9 great grandchildren and one great, great grandchild, and were married for 63 years.  They lived in Anaheim until 1969, when they moved to Torrance.  They remained there until their deaths – Jackie in 2007, and John in 2012.

John was a native Californian, born in Anaheim in 1924. As a young man, he worked at the orange packing house, then known as the Anaheim Orange & Lemon Association.   He served in the Army in Radio Intelligence during World War II and subsequently worked for the Federal Communications Commission, the Federal Aviation Agency, and after retirement from his government positions, as a consultant and inventor.  He was a life-long HAM radio operator.  Jackie was born in South Dakota in 1923. She raised seven children and later became a paralegal.  They were both active in their community and church.  They will remain “high school sweethearts” forever.