Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1947

Page 25 of 120

 

Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 25 of 120
Page 25 of 120



Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

age of six, he was actively associated with the St. Louis Public School System during ninety of the ninety-six years of his life. Such are the bare facts. They cannot pos- sibly convey the value of his services or the extent of his influence upon the thousands of students with whom he came in contact. His keen mind and understanding heart will long be remembered. At ninety he was still young enough to read the newspapers with- out glasses, and continue a conversation begun six months previously. As stated in the Eightieth Anniversary Number of TI-IE RED AND BLACK. So long as Central High School shall continue to open its doors to aspiring young people, the influence of Central's 'Grand Old Man' will go on and on. Mr. Bryan was born in St. Louis on March 12, 1853, the year Central High School was founded, and died here June 18, 1946. His parents were Mr. and Mrs. William Bryan. In 1876 he married Miss Nethie Case, a grad- uate of Central. They had six children, Dr. William M. C. Bryan, Mrs. Grace Bryan James, Mr. Howard Bryan, and three more daughters who died in early childhood. Dr. William M. C. Bryan married Miss Helen Louise Kimlin. They have four children: Dr. William T. K. Bryan, Dr. James Howard Bryan, Navy Chaplain Richard A. Bryan, and Mrs. Helen Bryan Johnson. Dr. Wil- liam M. C. Bryan died in 1925. Mr. How- ard Bryan Csecond son of W. J. S. Bryanj is an engineer residing in Webster Groves. He has one son, Bruce Bryan, who is now at Purdue University after serving in Ger- many during World War II. Mrs. Grace Bryan James Conly living daughter of W. J. S. Bryanj has a son, Dr. Harold James, and two married daughters, Mrs. Alice Finley and Mrs. Elizabeth Tetge. Mr. William J. S. Bryan had six children, eight grandchildren, and fifteen great-grand- ib- NET1-IIE CASE BRYAN children, all descended from his first wife, Nethie Case Bryan, who died in 1889. In 1898 Mr. Bryan married Miss Grace Kitchen, a Central alumna, whom many re- member as a most gracious and charming per- son. Although she had no children of her own, she was a truly conscientious mother to her husbands children by his first wife, and her interest in the activities of old Central continued as long as she lived. She kept up a list of the addresses of thousands of Central graduates and at her death bequeathed it to the school as a priceless legacy.

Page 24 text:

W. J. S. BRYAN J, S, Bryan 1853-1946 GRACE KITCHEN BRYAN The name of William James Samuel Bryan has been associated with the St. Louis Central High School longer than that of any other one person. He graduated from Central in l869, winning the Washington University Honor Scholarship with an average of 98 f2 , which has never been surpassed by a Central student. He was invited to become a mem- ber of the Central faculty in 1873 before he received his degree from Washington Uni- versity, and continued to teach until l895, when he succeeded F. Louis Soldan as Princi- pal. He served as Principal until l908, when he became Assistant Superintendent of ln- struction in charge of high schools. After continuing in the latter position for twenty years, Mr. Bryan retired from active duty, but continued to act as Library Adviser and Historian until his death in 1946. For thirty-nine years he was an actual par- ticipant in the affairs of Central as student, teacher, and principal. Entering school at the



Page 26 text:

JULIA VALLETTE COFFEY Julia Vallette Coffey 1847-1946 Julia Vallette was a member of the class of June, 1868, and the subject of her very interesting graduation address was Trifles . Life, she said, like the vast ocean, is composed of little drops: little drops of grief and pain, mingled with those of joy, adding color to the whole. What is a trifle? If we mean small events, then our lives are composed of them. All that surrounds us is but a combination of minute particles. ,The largest mountain is but atoms of dust. Young people go forth into the world expecting at once to find some great glorious mission. They are apt to neglect the lesser duties and responsibilities which make, for some, the whole, and for all, the greater part of life. If they waste their time in idleness and discontent, they find themselves not ready when great opportunities occur. After all, what is it but the noblest of trifles that have enabled our greatest men to rise from the low- est stations? Such was Julia Vallette's philosophy, and how nobly did she take care of the millions of trifling duties that were hers throughout the ninety-nine years of her life! She was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on Au- gust 23, l847, and died at Pana, Illinois, on August 24, 1946. Her mother was Marcy Ann Field, who came from Rhode Island to Cincinnati and married a hatter named Fred- erick A. Vallette, who later moved to St. Louis and bought a sawmill near Cairo, Illi- nois. He made cracker boxes for General C1rant's Army, ran the blockade between St. Louis and Cairo, and had his sawmill burnt by the Southern soldiers. Shortly after Julia Vallette graduated from Central High School, she met T. C. Coffey, who was a student at Shurtleff College, Alton, Illinois. Soon after he finished col- lege and was ordained as a Baptist minister, they were married. After serving many years as pastor of various Baptist Churches in Illi- nois, Rev. Coffey died in Arizona, in 1930. They had one son, Mr. Roy V. Coffey, who has been a commercial teacher at Central since l9l5, and four daughters, one of Whom died in infancy. The other three daughters are Mrs. C. T. Ward, of Tonica, Illinois: Mrs. Frank Allan Cutler, of Pana, Illinois: and Mrs. A. C. Stanfleld, also of Pana, Illinois. Frank Allen Cutler, Jr., a grandson of Julia Vallette Coffey, was the highest rank- ing student and valedictorian of the graduat- ing class at the University of Illinois in 1942. He had a straight A record for four years in chemical engineering. After doing research work in synthetic rubber for the Goodrich Rubber Company during World War II, he was given a fellowship at the University of Minnesota, where he is now Working for his Ph.D. degree. The two granddaughters were both accom- plished musicians and high school teachers of music. Miss Margaret R. Cutler graduated from Eastern Illinois State Teachers College and Miss Marjorie Ward, now Mrs. Joseph Sibigtroth, from Illinois University. Yes, Julia Vallette Coffey spent ninety- nine years dealing with the trifles of life, and what a great mountain of achievement did she build up, one small pebble at a time, as an example of noble living for her children, and grandchildren, and all the world! In fond appreciation Central High School offers a wreath of honor to her memory.

Suggestions in the Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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Central High School - Red and Black Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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