Several individuals responded to the request
in the spring issue of Inside Santa Clara for information
on the origin of the names of some Santa Clara streets (see
related article on this screen).
Pritchard Court is named for J.L. Pritchard who served as
Mayor from 1926-1928 and then again in 1949-1950. Fargher
Drive is named in honor of Lawrence Fargher who served as
both a Mayor and a City Councilman in the mid-to-late 1960s.
Another resident said that Lyle Court is named for Lyle Grigsby
who was a surveyor and then Chief Public Works Inspector in
the City of Santa Clara Engineering Department during the
1960s and 1970s.
Local History Librarian Mary Hanel said that curiosity about
the origin of local school names prompted her to provide the
following background on some of the people whose names are
now connected with schools in the Santa Clara Unified School
District.
Bracher School is named for Karl E. Bracher who was an early
day Santa Clara orchardist. A native of Germany, he came with
his parents to Santa Clara in 1885 when he was 8 years old.
His family had extensive orchard properties and operated the
Bracher Fruit Company. Their ranch home was on Kifer Road.
Buchser High School was named in honor of the Superintendent
of Schools, Emil R. Buchser, who headed the school district
when the building opened in 1958. His son, Emil R. Buchser
Jr. was the first principal of the new high school. At the
time Emil Buchser died in 1969, his obituary noted that "all
but two of his nine brothers and sisters were teachers or
administrators in Santa Clara County Schools as are his two
sons".
Haman School was built in 1952 and named in honor of Carl
W. Haman, who at the time was chairman of the Board of Education
of Santa Clara schools. When he laid the cornerstone of the
new elementary school, he was retired from Rosenberg Brothers
and he and his wife still lived in the same house they had
first moved into in Santa Clara in 1905. When Mr. Haman died
in October 1957 he was widely hailed as Santa Clara's "Mr.
Education."
Peterson Middle School opened in 1965 and is named in honor
of Marian A. Peterson. A native Santa Claran, Mrs. Peterson
graduated from San Jose State and taught primary grades for
many years in San Jose and Santa Clara schools. Mrs. Peterson
retired from teaching after World War II but served more than
10 years as a board member of both the Santa Clara Elementary
School and the Santa Clara High School districts in the late
1950s and early 1960s. These school districts unified with
the old Jefferson School District and Alviso to form the Santa
Clara Unified School District in 1966.
Wilcox High School was built in the early 1960s and was
named for Adrian Wilcox who served as a member of the Santa
Clara Union High School Board of Trustees for more than 30
years. Mr. Wilcox graduated from Santa Clara High School and
the University of California. The pear rancher was a descendant
of the Hon. Isaiah A. Wilcox, a pioneer Santa Clara pear,
prune and strawberry horticulturist known throughout the State
in the 1880s for his "Experimental Gardens."
Wilson High School, now used for Santa Clara Unified School
District's Adult Education classes, originally served as an
intermediate school when it opened in 1955 and was named in
honor of local bakery owner William A. Wilson. The school
board noted, in selecting his name for the new school, that
he "spearheaded the drive for City swimming pool facilities,
which resulted in construction in 1950 of three pools on school
premises-a children's pool, a racing pool and a diving pool."
Contact Local History Librarian Mary Hanel at the Central
Library, 615-2909, or send her an email
if you have other information or stories about the naming
of schools or streets in Santa Clara. |