Saturday, May 3, 2008

Where We Went To School

One thing Burbank is not known for (and for good reason) is its architecture. That said, two Burbank grade schools are architectural stand-outs: Tobin (no longer among us) and Luther Burbank (still among the living -- the building, that is, not the person). And I have to admit that I didn't appreciate either of these when I was a kid, but click on each one to englarge them and take a close look. They're truly impressive buildings, and they put the other abominations (especially the three schools I attended) here to shame!

So, tell me where you went to school. And what do you remember about the school itself? One thing I remember was showing up before the start of the school year to see whose homeroom I would be in; the lists were always posted on the front door. An event! (Again, this was the '70s, and we didn't have a whole hell of a lot to occupy our time back then.)



Tobin (above). (An anonymous reader of the blog sent a bunch of photos of Tobin to me, including many from when Tobin was torn down, which I'll post soon.) This photo looks like Tobin after a nuclear holocaust. Look at the barren ground, and notice how hard the flag is flapping. Haunting. But a great-looking building nevertheless.


Luther Burbank (above). (This photo is courtesy of Sherry Cofer-Logan.) Enlarge this one, and take a close look at it. This is in Burbank? Of course, I saw it all the time, but why was I so oblivious to it as a kid?


St. Albert's (above). I've never been inside St. Albert's. (For church, my family attended St. Fabian's, so my experience of St. Albert's was limited to their carnival). What's a shopping cart doing locked to the hand-rail?


Fry (above). For my money, this is the ugliest school in the district. I attended Fry from 1973-74 for third and fourth grades. I wrote my first piece of creative writing here, a play about a fat superhero who slips inside of a phone booth to change into his costume and gets stuck. And here I am, thirty-four years later, still thinking up ridiculous ideas. Thank you, Fry.



Byrd (above). I suppose if you use your imagination, you can see some Frank Lloyd Wright influences...maybe? (I know, I know, I'm stretching here, but it's not as bad as Fry or the others below.)


And now we come to two schools that are more or less interchangeable: McCord (above) and Kennedy (below). Try to find the differences. Can you? I have to say, though, that these are some sad-looking schools.


Kennedy (above). I attended Kennedy from 1975-79, from fifth through eighth grade. I spent sixth grade in the mobile units out back. Our teacher (let's call him Mr. L.) was a compulsive smoker, and so he would sometimes go into the bathroom and light one up on the sly. The problem was that smoke would come rolling out of the vents. Another time, after he'd driven through a bad snow storm to get to work, he sat in front of the class and told us that he needed a cigarette, and he didn't care if we reported him; and then he pulled out a pack, lit a cigarette, and smoked it in front of us in silence. Ah...the seventies!


Maddock (above). Maddock was my first grade school in Burbank: 1971-72, for first and second grade. It looks a little bit like a factory with that smoke stack popping up out of the roof. Believe it or not, I attended two other schools before Maddock -- one in Argo and one (briefly) in Houston, Texas. Maddock was the third school I attended for first grade; I had fallen so far behind that a girl in my first-grade class at Maddock offered to do all my homework for me. And guess what? I let her. (I'm still in her debt!)

27 comments:

Unknown said...

Ahh, the public school system of Burbank! I grew up on 81st and Neenah, so I went to McCord from 1st-6th grade, then to Tobin for 7th and 8th grade.

I have a lot of good and bad memories from both schools, though what really is sticking out in my memory now was the occasions I picked up my little sister from McCord in the middle of a school day because she was sick (she is 11 years younger then I am). Walking into McCord as an adult felt sort of surreal, it was like the entire building looked exactly the same as it has when I was 8 years old, only it had shrunk.

I was shocked the first time I was back out in Burbank and saw the new Tobin, (by the time they started doing all that my mom no longer lived down in Burbank, so I get down there even more rarely now), so I had no idea the construction was even going on.

And let us not forget Reavis, which I attended for my 4 years of highschool. Class of 2000 here (I know I am a bunch younger then just about everyone else posting on here). Though I am sure it was easier to get away with stuff in highschool back in the 70s and 80s even, lol. My friends and I managed to get away with a lot in highschool (I was well practiced at imitating my mother calling myself in sick).

YellowRose said...

I always thought Luther Burbank School was a good looking building. It has character! I attended there from Kindergarten to 8th grade! Glad you could use the photo.

Anonymous said...

Where are all the Reavis High photos?!?!

Anonymous said...

i also went to kennedy. all the way k-8 had some good times there and good teachers. never for get Mr. B's science class (6-8th grade) sat front row gave me the best advise that i'll never forget. "Joe, don't ever get married, dont have kids, buy a Harley and call me up and we'll ride cross country." ha crazy mr.B

Joe Pondo
myspace.com/ponjo

John murphy said...

One thing Burbank is not known for (and for good reason) is its architecture. That said, two Burbank grade schools are architectural stand-outs: Tobin (no longer among us) and Luther Burbank.

-------------AGREE___________>
The school board is looking at demo for Burbank with in 10 years , I dont know who was the archetect or Burbank , But Tobin was a Godfrey Larson Building ..Two other Godfrey Larson Buildings are on the Illinois historic building roster. Tobin should of been protected. But not unlike your experiance with our "Mayor" our culture .. our existence where we came from ...what we want to preserve or remember is put off as trivial.but keep writing your books. You have a niche market that transends burbank but encompases a generation.

John murphy said...

Interesting side note, There was a Harry Fry an Edward J. Tobin a Rosa Maddock..who where these people? I know a few. but heck these people got school buildings named after them. Most of us will never get an out house named after us.

bm116 said...

First off let me mention I attended pre-school at a facility in Nottingham Park - I have no idea if this is still offered, if the builing is still there, what the building actualy was...

Then it was Kennedy from K-8.

Those nine years seemed like an eternity. Now nine years are gone in a blink!

Memories? Countless. I seem to remember a certain principal with a Scottish accent yelling through a megaphone 'Let's get in line!'

leomemorial said...

I went to Kennedy. Althought thank you to the person who sent in the Tobin pic. I played volleyball there and remember we had to change in the boys bathroom. Yuck. The building was really old but kind of cool, in a haunted house kind of way.

Anonymous said...

I attended Owens School from 63-70, followed by Kennedy for two years. I believe Owens was built in the style of one long hallway, so it's a bit difficult to praise it's structure.

I recall that somewhere around the outside of the middle of the building there was a large grate in the ground covering some little room the janitors used for access to something. Once in a while someone would drop some torn up pictures of playboy centerfolds down there and all the kids would gather around the grate until a teacher made us get away.

At lunchtime I remember being allowed to eat our lunch in our classrooms for a year or two, but at some point they began herding us all down the hall each day to eat lunch in the gymnasium sitting on the bleachers. This meant we had to balance our lunch in our laps or set it on the bleacher. Considering we also had to take our coats down for recess afterwards, there was precious little room to set anything and often a part or all of one's lunch dropped down to the floor below, until later swept up by the janitors broom. Many sandwiches were passive aggressively pushed to their death, but it was always a sad day when the suzy qs went down.

I don't get to Burbank often, but I know Owens became the police station for several years. Don't know if it still is.

leomemorial said...

I don't get to Burbank often, but I know Owens became the police station for several years. Don't know if it still is.

The police station moved and now has a new building past Rice Park before the Bedford Industrial area, thank goodness. I think the old station was changed into a senior citizen place, which is what it was when the dept was there.

Anonymous said...

ok...did everyone forget about Dulles??? I only went to kindergarten there, before moving on and tried to believe I was a "saintly and pious" catholic girl, going on 1st through 8th grade at St Albert the Great...but I don't even see any pictures of Dulles. Having lived on Mayfield (both in my moms home and then later on in a different house down the street married) I have alot of found memories of Dulles, including my first bout of drinking in the park there with good ol boonesfarm wine...and for anyone who went to public school...us catholic kids were always jealous of the time you guys had off while we were in school, the fact that you had sports and we didn't ....and that you got to dress any which way you wanted, and we had our wonderful plaid uniforms....I was always grateful I wasn't sent off to Queen of Peace and got to go to Reavis all 4 years...ahhh the memories of Reavis in the 70's...remember the walkout?? and what about our streaker??

Anonymous said...

I went to Maddock from K-8. Remember when they closed Nottingham and all of those kids had to be bused to Maddock? At first, we were resentful of each other, but ended up becoming friends. There are some fond memories and not so fond memories. Sometimes I think about going back there and telling off some of the teachers who reprimanded me for things I never did. I was glad to leave grammar school behind and go to high school.

Anonymous said...

I went to St.Albert, kind-8th, and was always amazed for it's size in terms of a private Catholic school. Nottingham Elementary (was it called that back in the day) is a Buddhist temple now. I live just a few blocks from it - asked my parents if it was still open as a school if I would've been sent there, they said no - they're Catholics so they only considered Catholic grammar schools. No biggie, since I attended a Catholic high school after graduating from St. Al's.

Anonymous said...

It is a shame that all our schools are being torn down and rebuilt with huge buildings with all kinds of rooms. What happened to cramming 25 to 30 kids in one room. We didn't go from room to room for different classes. They came to us. I remember that when it was time for music the piano was pushed down the hall from classroom to classroom. I don't think too many of you are old enough to remember Miss Graffey but she could make music class fun.

Anonymous said...

great stories.if anyone can post nottingham,owens,dulles pics on here that's be great.btw i remember all the schools nicknames but what was dulles? the cowboys i heard? i went to kennedy and mr.b was great!! anybody remember mr.mica? great guy.

Unknown said...

I went to Fry and I was a class clown

Anonymous said...

was the walkout at Reavis you are referring to due to the fact that the guy who chopped another guys ear off with a hatchet while tripping on acid
was allowed back in school? (i know their names and also know one of them very well. wont say which one)

Anonymous said...

i went to Dulles in the early 70's.
i still have my DULLES COWBOYS T-Shirt!!!!! i remember those mobile trailers that i went kindergarten to 2nd grade in were like ovens in summer and freezers in winter and smelled like pee when some kid would wet himself. Ms.Lynch was our principal. man she was mean!
her brother was a priest at St. Alberts, he married my parents in 65 and me and my wife in 96!
i still have all my Dulles report cards too. (my Ma saved everything)
Thanks Ma!!!

Anonymous said...

You forgot Dulles. I not only went there but also hung out there. So many memories so little time.

Unknown said...

I grew up on 86th street, went to maddock school, 70-75, remember walking 9 blocks to Maddock school, Mrs. Whalen kindergarten teacher, I remember getting trouble in 3rd grade for scratching a boys face, well he was picking on me lol. I remember zayers, Dr. mastudaS???? I remember those little trailor birthday parties that parked in front of ur house and had parties in them??? I have a picture of Mrs. Whalens kindergaten class with classmates: Christine May, Ronnie Vandewhel, Joey Marzano, Sherri Quick, Sherri Duncan, Roberta, Lisa, Kelly, Charlie, Mickey, Micheal, Pam, Diane Ajacx, Jeanie. and more that i cant remember but I will post it if anyone is interested.

John McNally said...

Please tell me more about the trailer parties. I only dimly remember these.

Anonymous said...

The one trailer that would come to your house was called "Bus-o-Fun"
they had games to play and you could pick out crappy plastic prizes! holy crap, what a memory!
Remember the Mister Softee ice cream trucks? I saw one for the first time in like 30 years while i was in toronto in 2004. i thought i was going to have a brain hemmorage. then last year i saw one in oak lawn!

Unknown said...

I remember going to 2 of those trailor parties, one was like a little jail and cops, kinda scary for me so I must of been little, i remember the dirt track behind my house in the field before u get on my way to Mcdonald's , The Big Slide i burned my leg on. by the Italian beef sandwihich resturaunt both ends dunked my mom's favorite! I remember riding our bikes to every park around, I remeber for some reason being scared of the woman in the house on the end of the block, No clue why, funny how things come back to you, I took an aieral view of burbank online and walked the 9 blocks to rosa G. maddock remembering the people that lived in them, try it. It was fun.

Anonymous said...

I walked from 81st and state to st albert's every day, from kindergarten to 5th grade back in the late 80's/early 90's.... my kids are going to laugh at me when i tell them when they get older how i used to walk on top of the snow piles from the old barn restaruant on the way to school...

Anonymous said...

What a great site! I went to Nottingham from K thru the middle of 4th grade. We then moved out of state for the remainder of the school year. I have good memories of Nottingham Park the neighborhood and the school. I think it is now owned by Buddhists. It was a unique little community. The principal was Mr. Kipnis who was wonderful and I had a great teacher in 4th grade named Mrs. Trost. In 1st grade I had Mrs. Gresham who I did not care for at all.

Then I returned to Burbank for 5th and 6th grade (1969-1971) to Fry School. What a nighmare. Punk kids who bullied me mercilessly. I walked from Rutherford to Mobile everyday which I believe was about 10 blocks in the bitter cold of winter. Dr. Liddle was the principal at the time and was not very nice to the students. I had two good teachers there, Mr. Ardizonne and Mr. Merrion. They were wonderful.

Anonymous said...

i got to reavis right now i am trying to look for my old teachers at maddock such great memories...

Daniel E. Niemiec said...

I went to McCord K-6 and Tobin 7-8 (class of '81!). Principal John Lonosky, who ran Tobin like a boxing camp, was removed in 80 and replaced by Ms. Lynch, who ran it like a Catholic school prison. She died midway through the year and Lonosky came back. Is there a list of Tobin teachers? Ok here's my memory of McCord: k: Miss Dosher 1: Miss Ahern (later Mrs. Kudia) 2: Miss Smetana (later Mrs. Prium), 3: Mrs. Werner, 4: Mr. Rabbitt, 5: Ms. Ohanesian, 6: Miss Quaid. From Tobin I remember Miss Kaschins the music teacher, Miss O'Connor taught English. You never felt like you were being spoonfed content but learned a lot. She had been there since 1950. Mr. Caputo taught social studies. Ms. Biesek taught Math - she died at 40 from a bad heart. Mr. Bayless science, Mr. Van Dyke, Mr. Pales also taught math. I can't remember the rest. I only spent 9 months with these people and can't remember their names...Mr. Young was gym teacher and temporary principal. We need a "where are they now" site...