In one
of my past blogs, I shared my best effort to put together an All Class Reunion
for my grade school. The Little French
Church, May 31st. Unfortunately, that effort has fallen flat and only a
half dozen folks have responded. At
about the same time that I decided to put that effort to rest, my old high
school sent me a notice of a quasi-reunion of sorts.
It’s
for an unofficial (but much welcomed) 61st class reunion for the Cretin High
School Class of 1961. It’ll be held at a bar/restaurant in the nearby neighborhood.
It’s more of a group effort by several classmates of mine than an officially
sanctioned school affair. The reality is that many of our classmates have
already passed and waiting another ten years for another class reunion probably
isn’t too realistic unless it’s held in someone’s living room.
At
about the same time I got the notice for this 61st class reunion, two books
came to my attention about my old high school. Both were written by graduates
of our all-boys military institution in Saint Paul.
The
first is called ‘Cretin Boy’ by Jim Landwehr, a graduate of the class of 1979.
The
second book was written by a classmate of mine who collected all the content
for a book of memories of our class of 1961. Both books paint a vivid and
honest portrait of that time period in my life as much as ‘they’ can remember
it. Unfortunately, my own memory bank of my educational years is low on credit
and almost in default.
The
classrooms have vanished in all of my past halls of learning. From St. Louis
Grade School to Cretin High School to the College of Saint Thomas, nothing has
remained the same. Time, social changes and the inevitable march of progress
has altered, erased or radically changed the face of education as I once knew
it.
My
earliest recollection of my formal education came from foggy brown-tinted photo
plates nestled in the back of my head. There were fleeting images of creaking
old wooden steps, the smell of old classrooms, wary nuns watching our every
movement and poverty; even though we couldn’t recognize it at the time. It
didn’t help that down the block were rows and rows of run-down tenements
housing indigent and homeless people.
I
don’t remember much about first or second grade when my sister and I walked to
St. Louis Catholic Grade School each day. By third grade our mother had built a
home in Highland Park, a half hour streetcar ride away. Each morning we would
take the trolley to downtown St. Paul with our mother. Each night, my sister
and I would take the rickety transit back home again alone.
Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society |
Unlike
a lot of the schools around our home in Highland Park, St. Louis Grade School
was anything but vanilla and main stream. Students came from the surrounding
neighborhoods like Irving Park, East Saint Paul, West Saint Paul, and the
projects behind the capitol. It was an eclectic, mostly poor, somewhat mix-race
group of students; clearly reflective of their communities of origin.
The
teachers were all nuns. They were tough-minded, serious, no bullshit kind of
instructors who had the full backing of our parents. We understood that
punishment at school was always favored in lieu of a call to our parents. Catholic
doctrine had a firm grip on our young lives and followed us home as well. The grade
school closed in 1962 and the building razed in 1966.
photo credit: Jerry Hoffman |
For
many of us, high school proved to be a pivotal point in our lives. Even more
than college, it was where the stumbles of youth were corrected by the
realities of our teenage years and finally solidified into the more mature
footsteps that carried us through our collegiate and/or skill building future.
Reflecting
back on that time period in Minnesota history and my own historical tracks, I
realize now that attending Cretin High School back in the late 50’s and early
60’s was a unique learning experience. The idea of an all-boys military school
seems strange today with the sensibilities bubbling up from younger
generations. Back then, it was our reality and not far out of line with the
general mood of the country and our parents.
photo credit: Jerry Hoffman |
In
retrospect, it was a turning point in the history of our country. The beginning
of the end of that idyllic plain vanilla existence our parents loved so much
and wanted us to emulate. The old neighborhood was morphing through all kinds
of changes just as we were. It was end of Doris Day and her’ Doggie in the
Window.’ It was Frank Sinatra and his version of cool slowly being drowned out
by the heavy drumbeat and bass guitar of Rock and Roll. It was hot rods and
tail fins and poodle skirts that only hinted of secrets underneath. The Cold
War was inescapable but it hardly permeated our existence the same way Rock and
Roll and the first warm feelings of affection for the opposite sex did.
Cretin
High School was a different kind of school but those of us attending it really
weren’t any different from our friends at other schools. We came from all walks
of life but for the most part were solidly middle class. Back in the late
fifties, Cretin’s tentacles spread out across the Twin Cities in one last grasp
at prospects before newer Catholic High Schools in the suburbs started to pick
from the litter.
Cretin
was a molder of men, a change-maker, and a foundation upon which to build one’s
own values, aspirations, judgements, and creative hunger. Like ‘Bob Dylan’s
Dream,’ my rag-tag group of Cretin friends have scattered with the winds of
time. There are only a couple of guys left that I’ve managed to string together
with a loose fitting web of memories that we can cling to. It was the best of
times…most of the time. Now in retrospect, it seems even better than that.
Following
in my cousin’s footsteps, the College of Saint Thomas was the next step in educating
myself. It started out normal enough with two years of learning then hit the
preverbal bump in the road. Two losing quarters at the University of Minnesota
prompted an invitation from the administration to take a break. Ever watchful,
Uncle Sam welcomed me into the United States Army, sent me around the country
and left me with the GI Bill to finish my college education back at St Thomas.
Then
living abroad, starting a career in writing and television, and I was finally
taking my first tentative steps toward a lifelong career in what I loved to do.
All
my old classrooms have now disappeared into that dark, murky pool called fast-fading
memories. Along with a few scattered classmates, all I have are some old photos
and mind-pictures that keep morphing from vapid to vague. Thankfully, the lingering effects of hard work, focus and
determination, long since hammered into my soft core brain, hasn’t gone away.
Even if the classrooms have.
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