High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 4 text:
“
FOREWORD We come to use our hands. King Richard II, Act III, Sc. I In the earliest of man's history, he spoke not with his tongue but with his hand. The hand was then the spokeman of the mind, setting forth ideas, beliefs, aspirations, and fears. As man's life grew more complex, the hand began to be used more and more for craftsmanship, carrying, hunting, and cultivating. Man found his hands full. No longer were they available for the conveyance of ideas. Gradually the hand yielding its position to the tongue. The hand then became the mind's implementa- tion, the means by which man's thoughts are trans- ferred into concrete realities. When man first con- ceived the idea of the wheel he built it with his hand, thereby, laying the foundation for all en- gineering and mechanism. When Thomas jeffer- son penned the immortal Declaration of Independ- ence, setting forth the origin and, just end of gov- ernment, he did so with his hand. All civilization is the product of the creative hand. The day of mere theorizing is past. Todayis ideas must be put into action to really count. Cass Technical High School was founded in recogni- tion of this. At Cass, we not only learn how to do, but also we practice doing. Our school devel- opes young men and women to enter those fields of endeavor which hold for them, the greatest hap- piness and for society, the greatest benefit. We, the graduates of today, hold in our hands the destiny of the universe. What we do with it will be determined largely by the training we re- ceive and the aptitudes developed today. There- fore, we, the 1951 graduating class of the Cass Technical High School have chosen the theme of this yearbook . . . the hand. TABLE OF CONTENTS Dedication . . Administration . Retirements . . Seniors and Faculty . Literary . . . Sports . Homeroonis Organizations . Advertising . . 1 2 4 5 59 . 67 75 . 99 . ll3
”
Page 3 text:
“
qldjwvgb AQ4Q0XuJz,ff,cwX, A 525905 If W A I I A I , Za IIIIIIllllllllllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllg W E X Owl!! My MU MM QA! 5 7 L if X !,Af f I E 'hifpbpwfl 3 W I A C V Rr' If was X S vmuwxa 40 MM Sv E My QM? . 7 gi 5 JW NMS? Q W yi 2 J f, A V , f I I LV 54.2-f' S 3 Qljb kNb I g ' A f 3 EA 0. A REPRESENTATION OF THE 1951 JANUARY AND JUNE GRDUATING CLASSES CASS TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL DETROIT, MICHIGAN 6 .. T956-Qff 773
”
Page 5 text:
“
History of Cass Technical High School In 1862 the students in the Capitol school, located at the head. of Griswold street, were transfered to the new Cass Union school, on the site of the present Commerce High School. Lewis Cass, Michigan's greatest statesman, had given a tract of land bounded by Grand River Road, High Street CVernor Highwayj Second Avenue and Gilman Street, for the growing city of Detroit to build a new school. Little did he dream of the lasting and world-wide future - little to be. At the time skirts of town, tended only to reputation this school was to have in the did he know of the size it would grow the school was built, it was on the out- for the built-up portions of Detroit ex- Elizabeth street. Directly north of the school stood Jones' Grove - the site of the present Cass Technical High School and Cass Park. Where the Masonic Temple now stands - cows grazed. Even further north, in areas now serviced by Dexter buses, Kings Woods provided areas where students could pick wild flowers during recess. Grand River road was a plank road - i. e. - on one side there were planks laid down for a road, wide enough for one team of horses, on the other was mud - mud which raised dust in the summer and was impassible in rainy weather. Opposite the school, on Grand River road and Second, stood Kings Cattle Yards, where great herds of cattle were bought and sold. Opposite the cattle yards stood a little brick store where a German woman sold candy to the students. The candy was purchased, with postage stamps and script, for the civil war was in full swing and the government had issued the script to relieve fin- ancial stress. The hours in the Cass school were quite different from the present set-up, for all the students lived within walking distance from the school and could go home for lunch. There were classes from a quarter before nine to twelve in the morning and from a quarter to two to four in the afternoon, with fifteen minutes recess in both halves. The boys and girls of the school sodded the lawn and set out trees to make their campus more beautiful. They also put an American flag from a pole on top of the school. For one reason the boys living on Michigan Avenue had a grudge against the Cass students, and woe betide the boy who had to stay late at school - he was sure of beating unless he was a good runner. Mr. Harlow Ollcott, was principal of the school for four years and gave the school quite a reputation for its discipline. After a tempestuous period caused by the irate temper of its first principal, the old school came into its second period of development. The area around the school became the residence of Detroit's finest citizens. The cowpastuers gave way to elegant homes and the old school expanded from a twelve room structure into a 22 room building. For thirty years Cass school was the mecca of thou- sands of Detroit citizens, seeking training that was ex- celled in no other part of the state. The calibre of train- ing of Cass boys and girls has never been questioned, due to the high grade of teacher employed at the school. In 1872 some Cass boys got together and began the first baseball team in Michigan, which became the champs of Michigan a few years later. They were also pioneers in the field of school athletic spirit. After forty years the neighborhood around the school had changed. Boarding houses stood where once were fine homes. Something had to be done to retain the prominence of Cass in Detroit's school history. Well do Mr. W. E. Stirton and Mr. L. Jennings remember when Wales Martendale, for whom Martend.ale Avenue is named, decided that Cass was to become a commercial and mechanical arts school. Mr. Martendale, superin- tendent of schools at the time, felt that students were droping out of school too soon. New plans were drawn up and the first classes entered in September, 1907. The basement of the First Presbyterian Church was rented for labs and art rooms. Money was appropriated in 1908 by the city council and the cornerstone of the Cass Tech- nical school was laid. When completed, Cass consisted of the old building plus the new addition. The Board of Education installed a two years business course, which enabled students to take a business course and get a diploma in two years. Then came a disaster on the night of November 16, 1909. Fire destroyed the old building but the new ad- dition was saved. Perhaps those Cass students were the only ones to have the students dream come true - his school burning down, and with it all the school books!! As soon as the shock of the calamity to the old build- ing had passed over, and school had resumed in the ad- dition and in a church at Woodward and Sibley Avenues, the council allowed S225,000 to build a new high school to completely cover the original site d.onated by Lewis Cass. This was called Cass Technical High School, built in 1912 - name changed to Commerce High later - and still standing. There is an old saying - Ulf ghosts could talk, what would they have to say. This can be answered in part by looking back into old school papers and yearbooks. The oldest record of published material in Cass are 1910- 1911 Triangles, printed before Commerce was built. At that time, and until 1919, the Triangle was booklet put out every three months, containing gossip, stories, jokes, and news of the various clubs and organizations. Also, there were ads, and some of those same companies that advertised in the 1911 issue of the Triangle are still i.1 existence. I-Iudson's, Wheyning Brothers, and Rayl's are three which have come down through the years. These ads give us some idea of the clothes of the times, and of the current slang . Familiar names pop up - 1915, Mr. Louis Jennings, now programming counselor at Cass. It is said of Mr. Jennings that he once fell asleep in class, and his teacher had to re-awake him. Then there is Mr. William Stirton, showing up first as a student writing inspired poetry, later as a physics teacher fthis is what happens to those seniors who don't graduatelj and later as principal. Mr. Navickas, first as a student and. then as teacher. Also John C. Lodge, late Detroit council- man
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.