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Schools

History

The first school in Adams Township was taught by Enoch Wing and kept in his log 
cabin near the mouth of Cats Creek in about 1797. It "was attended by the youth of the 
whole settlement for a distance of four miles along the river". The first schoolhouse was 
built by a gathering of the neighbors after the public school law went into effect about 
1800." Subscription schools were conducted until the public school law went into effect. 
An old school bill from Enoch Rector, teacher, to Nathaniel Mason reads: "Tuition of 
one student at $1.50 per quarter."

​

Existing records show that Lowell's school system started soon after the incorporation 
of the village in 1851. In 1854, a two-story brick schoolhouse was built at the corner of 
Fourth and Market Streets. Within ten years after this, a German school was started, 
since the Lowell community was made up primarily of people of German origin. This 
two-story brick structure sufficed until 1906 when, to provide more room, the school 
board authorized funds not to exceed $500 for the construction of a one-room frame 
schoolhouse. As the enrollment increased, the board provided in 1907 that the frame 
building be increased 16 feet in length and a second story added.

​

Pupils enrolled in the schools during a 20-year period ending in 1905 numbered be
tween 24 and 43. The enrollment hit high points in 1886 and 1904 and was lowest 
between 1896 and 1902 due to no discernible reasons. The course of study during this 
period consisted mostly of the three R's. Major activities were "programs at Christmas 
time and on Decoration Day in addition to meetings of a literary society which was re
sponsible for good community entertainments."

​

Just prior to this period (in 1881), it is recorded that "the Lowell Independent School 
District embraced the entire town and a strip of the surrounding territory. It had graded 
schools with more than a local reputation and principals of the school deserved great 
credit for the manner in which they had built them up."

​

In 1908 Lowell obtained from the State Department of Education a first grade charter 
for a four-year high school. Seven years later a new school building was made possible 
through a bond issue of $34,000. By 1925 there was another bond issue of $20,000 for 
a combined auditorium and gymnasium. An additional $5,000 had been paid for an
adequate school site, making a total investment of $59,000 on the school plant which 
was valued at $80,000 by 1950, in addition to $25,000 worth of equipment.

​

There are no available records on school attendance between 1905 and 1925. In 1930
31 there were 161 enrollees in the grades and 94 in the regular high school. Then the 
school operating costs on a nine-months basis amounted to almost $30,000. The staff 
included ten teachers in addition to the principal. The high school curriculum included 
courses in commercial work, home economics, and manual training, in addition to the 
subjects usually taught. The main idea though was the preparation of students for high
er learning, just the same as now. The curriculum was changed in 1931 from the 8-4 to 
the 6-6 plan.

​

In 1931, there were 125 students in the High and Junior High; Miss McCall, First and 
Second grades, had 29; Miss Schwartz, Second and Third grades, 40; Miss Lane, 
Fourth and Fifth, 9; and Miss Keeler, Fifth and Sixth, 38. For a total of 291 students in 
the school that year.

​

By 1940-41 the school enrollment had increased to 312 students although the number 
of teachers remained the same as in 1930-31 and the operating expense was less than 
in 1930. Vocational agriculture for the boys and home economics for the girls were add
ed to the curriculum in 1940. The work in agriculture was discontinued in 1947.


The library books were increased between 1930 and 1940 to almost 1,800 volumes, 
in addition to about the same number made available through a branch of the Marietta 
Public Library. By 1950 the library contained more than 3,000 volumes and new books 
were being added annually.

​

The school system was in charge of an elected Board of five members chosen by vote 
of the patrons who resided in the district on odd number years - two, one year and 
three, two years later. In all school matters, this Board functioned entirely separate from 
the Village Council. It elected its own chairman as well as a clerk-treasurer who could 
be either from within or outside its personnel. The Board had the final say in all matters 
pertaining to the school program.

​

The Lowell high school building was a two-story substantial brick structure housing 
shops and accommodating the sixth grade in the basement, elementary grades in addi
tion to a home economics room on the first floor, and intermediate grades and the high 
school on the second floor. The combined auditorium and gymnasium, off to the right, 
was attached to a back corner of the main building and was accessible through side en
trances. Assemblies, special programs, and class plays, as well as physical education 
and basketball, were centered in this unit of the building. The entire building was fairly 
well kept up by the Board of Education and by interested groups of school patrons.

By 1950, the school budget amounted to approximately $52,000 annually, considerably 
more than half of which came from the state's foundation and rehabilitation programs. 
The balance came from county tax and veteran's training funds and from tuition re
ceipts which accounted for about one-seventh of the entire budget. The county tax fund 
came from levies on a $600,000 valuation which was the highest in Washington Coun
ty for the smallest district in terms of square miles or acres.

​

Items of expenditures in the budget included teachers' salaries which accounted for 
more than three-fifths of the total. Those ranged between $1,950 and $3,400 inclusive. 
Operating costs for such items as coal, electricity, water, and janitor service took the 
second-largest amount; maintenance came next. During this year some $2,400 from 
the state rehabilitation fund was spent for toilet room facilities, electrical wiring, and for 
other less significant purposes. Only $1,300 was spent for transportation since costs 
for transporting those people from outside the district were met by the township from 
which they come.

​

In 1948-1949 the school's operating costs amounted to approximately $117.50 per 
pupil. This was lower than two neighboring towns' schools that operated on a similar 
basis. Beverly, with 256 pupils, spent about $129 and New Matamoras, with 255 pupils, 
spent $125. It was practically the same as for the Waterford (Wolf Creek district) with 
518 pupils. The school had 330 enrollees during that time, compared to 312 in 1940.
The school curriculum in 1950 included five divisions or phases, English, foreign lan
guages, mathematics, natural sciences, and social sciences. In the English group, 
there were composition and rhetoric, business English, history of English, and Amer
ican literature, public speaking, and classics (to meet college requirements). The lan
guages were limited to Latin. Mathematics covered arithmetic, algebra, commercial 
arithmetic,  and geometry. Natural sciences included general science, biology, physi
ology, physics, chemistry, and physical geography. The social sciences included eco
nomic geography, occupations, American democracy, and community civics.

​

The commercial department of Lowell High School was one of the strongest in the 
county. For many years it had received a superior achievement certificate from the 
"Business Education World." A graduating student who had specialized in this field 
needed no further training to secure a job.

​

Two veterans agricultural courses were conducted in connection with the Lowell High 
School. One of these, started in July 1948, had operated continuously with the maxi
mum number of students, 21. The other, which was for work of a more advanced na
ture, also had an enrollment of 21 participants in 1950.

​

Each class met two evenings per week in the schoolhouse. These students did their 50 
required hours of farm shop work per year in the school's manual training labora
tory during periods of regular school vacations. Both were under the direction of farm
er-teachers who lived in the Lowell community.

​

Washington County Normal School operated under the directions of the State Depart
ment of Education at Lowell from 1922 to 1927, when there was an available room 
in the high school building. It drew more than 100 students during this time, some of 
whom roomed and boarded in the community.

​

An instructor, provided by the State Department of Education, was assisted to some 
extent by certain local teachers. There was considerable emphasis on manual train
ing - making things for school and playground use - and "those who attended seemed 
to get a lot out of it for their money." Two of the students were teaching in the Lowell 
school in 1950 and quite a few others were located elsewhere in the county. 

​

The Normal School was discontinued because of an oversupply of school teachers in 
Ohio. The county normal was organized at Waterford in 1920 and later was moved to 
Lowell. The enrollment was 26 in 1927.

​

The most active club in the school was the Future Homemakers of America which was 
affiliated with the state and national F.H.A. organizations. It was started around 1946 
for girls who became eligible after taking one year of home economics. By 1950, there 
were 78 members in the group.

​

The club met on the first Tuesday of each month, during the last school period of the 
day. These meetings, conducted according to parliamentary procedure, consisted of 
reports, recreation, singing, and sometimes a talk by the club mother. Special evening 
meetings were sometimes held with the girls' families or with neighboring F.H.A. clubs 
invited to join them.

​

The club also held bake sales, prepared and served the annual basketball banquet, 
collected clothing for the Salvation Army, and sent delegates to the State F.H.A. con
vention. It was a very active organization as indicated by its year-round meetings. The 
members who lived outside of Lowell had little if any difficulty in getting transportation 
to the summer meetings.

​

The Glee Club or Mixed Chorus was a class which was organized to the extent of hav
ing two elected officers, a secretary, and a librarian. This was held to be the most ac
tive class in school. The group sang at such affairs as school assemblies, commence
ment, and the Washington County Music Festival. Each year it staged a minstrel which 
was well attended by the townspeople.

​

The Band was organized in the Fall of 1949 under the direction of the music teacher 
who appreciated that a number of students knew how to play the various instruments
and believed the school needed some outside activity. By 1950, the Lowell band con
sisted of 26 members with eight trumpets, four saxophones, four clarinets, three trom
bones, two snares, a bass drum, a bellaire, an alto, and a tuba.

​

The band members met twice a week, on Tuesdays and Fridays. They had an elected 
president, vice-president, secretary and reporter, treasurer, and librarian. Dues were 
ten cents a month and all money was directed toward patties for the members. They 
played at pep rallies and the Halloween parade. A Band Mothers' Club was started in 
1950 for the purpose of helping get the band uniforms, with the help of other organiza
tions in Lowell. 

​

The school had a basketball and a track team both of which competed with corre
sponding teams from twelve other schools in the County. The students of Lowell High 
School generated much enthusiasm for these sports and did well at backing their 
teams. The school mascot was a Panther.

​

There was a Hi-Y club which became inactive in 1922. Likewise, there were also Sci
ence and Math Clubs which became inactive by the 1940s.

​

Lowell High School also had the "Blue and White," a monthly high school publication 
which sold for five cents per copy. A reporter from each class would gather the informa
tion on activities and events for mimeographing and distribution. Usually, this was sup
plemented by additional items about members of the senior class.

​

The seniors were fortunate also in getting to handle the high school annual which was 
published every other year. These publications were a big help in raising more mon
ey. They also sponsored a play and held an annual Christmas dance, with an elected 
queen. In addition, money was raised by selling subscriptions to various magazines.
The juniors also showed considerable class spirit. They sponsored several rollerskat
ing parties and presented a banquet to the seniors each spring. The school had no 
council or other form of student government. Nor did the students have representatives 
to meet with faculty members on matters pertaining to discipline or the like. The total 
number of teachers was too small to make this advisable and possible. Each class 
elected its own officers, consisting of a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer,  
and historian, and its meetings were conducted according to parliamentary procedure.
A commendable feature for the Lowell high school was its Seal. This came from a 
drawing of the first settlement, just across the Muskingum River to the south. The 
drawing was made in connection with the local centennial celebration in 1938 by a U. 
S. Army engineer who at that time was stationed in Lowell.

​

From the drawing was made a plaque of appropriate size for display on the wall of
the school's main hallway. In addition to being used in a senior class signet ring, the 
seal served effectively for official motorization of grade transcripts and in various other 
ways. Lowell claimed itself to be "perhaps the only school in Washington County and 
even in a much larger area to have a seal," of this type, especially.

​

The first high school principal mentioned in the records was I. L. Ellis, who was em
ployed in 1884. Charles I. Parkings taught in the high school from 1884 to 1886; J. S. 
Jordan, 1886-90; D. A. Leake, 1890-94. In 1894 D. A. Leake was elected as the first 
superintendent of Lowell schools; he served in that position until 1902. In 1900 the 
teacher of the grammar department was F. C. Landsittle, a graduate of Lowell schools 
who later became a professor of education at Ohio State University. The superinten
dents and their terms of office after 1902 were: White, 1902-03; D. A. Leake 1903-05; 
W. E. Ellison, 1905-06; Quincy Leckrone, 1906-07; H. O. Young, 1907-10; D. A. Leake, 
1910-15; C. E. Eddleblute, 1915-18; D. A. Leake, 1918-23; F. A. Sheridan, 1923-26; 
Paul Wellman, 1926-27; J. F. Ryan, 1927-39; F. F. Young, starting in 1939.
The Lowell School District Board Members in 1925 were: President, A. C. Beach; 
Vice-President, Dr. J. W. Forshey; Board Members, Madge Spies, Charles Schwartz, 
and L. W. Wilking.

​

The Lowell School Faculty in 1925 were: Superintendent, F. A. Sheridan; High School 
Principal, Fred Mullenix; Commercial, Mathematics, and History, Gladys Martin; En
glish, Latin, and Domestic Science, Frieda Rechsteiner; 7th and 8th Grades, F. F. 
Young; 5th and 6th Grades, Florence Keeler; 3rd and 4th Grades, Lucille Keeler; 1st 
and 2nd Grades, Velma Wetz; Director of Normal School, Vera Dickinson.

​

In 1950, an idea was considered to consolidate five Washington County School Dis
tricts, Beverly, Wolf Creek, Lowell, Adams Township, and Watertown Township. Al
though there had been talk of consolidating the schools at Beverly and Waterford for 
years, the plan to bring Lowell and Adams Township into it was new.

​

In 1956 Lowell School District was annexed to the Beverly School District creating one 
large district which would be served by a new high school in Beverly. 

​

The consolidation became effective after the Washington County Board of Education 
rejected petitions of Lowell objectors. The board studied a petition, containing 413 sig
natures, and found only 192 of them valid. To block the annexation, 209 signatures (a 
majority) of people voting at the last election was necessary.

​

A merger of the Beverly District with Center District took effect in 1954 after a court de
cision placed the new plant of the Ohio Power company in the former district.

Although the combining of the districts was effective at once, the new high school 
building at Beverly would not be ready for occupancy until the following fall. Meanwhile, 
the two high schools continued to be conducted separately.

​

The Lowell school building, which housed both elementary and high school, would be 
used for the first eight grades the following year. At the time, Lowell High School enroll
ment was 128, with 237 in the elementary grades. Beverly High School enrollment was 
106, with 336 in the elementary grades.

​

The new high school was designed to accommodate 500 students in the hope that the 
Wolf Creek district, with an enrollment of 186 in the High School at Waterford, would 
have joined the new district.

​

The Lowell High School was torn down in 1967. 

​

By 1967, a number of rooms needed to be painted, and certain furniture and fixtures 
were in need of being replaced in the old High School building. But an expensive heat
ing system was just installed in 1959 or 1960. At the time it seems as though no one in 
the village supported the demolition of the building.

​

Mayor Clarence Luton asked the Board of Education to leave the high school gymnasi
um for a community recreation center for the village. The village agreed to assume all 
costs and responsibilities for this structure.  The Board opposed this as they felt that it 
would be an unattractive building on the street.

​

It was also suggested that the Lowell High School building be used, at least for a few 
years, as a Junior High School to help with the overcrowding of Fort Frye Schools. The 
Board voted down this idea as Beverly's parents were against having their children 
bussed to Lowell.

​

The high school was replaced by the present Lowell Elementary School at a cost of 
$663.220.97. To build the new elementary school, eight dwellings, two of them duplex
es, had to be demolished forcing some of the families to move out of the village, and a 
part of Fourth Street was closed off. This alone cost the taxpayers $106,000.

​

The dedication and open house for the new elementary  school was held on October 
22, 1967, with over 600 people in attendance. The main speaker for the dedication was 
the Honorable C. William O'Neill, who said "The community should be very proud of 
this edifice." He pointed out  that the building is a magnificent structure, but the faculty 
will determine the quality of education that the young people will receive.

​

A rededication ceremony was held on October 22, 1992, to commemorate the school's 
25th anniversary. Former Superintendent Simon Rechedy and former principal, Marjo
rie Hammond, were on hand for the rededication.

​

Adams Twp. had about a dozen rural school districts around the turn of the century, in 
addition to the Lowell Local School District. Those school districts included: Avondale, 
Bear Run, Decker Fairview, Fairplay, Fisher, Greenwood, Hillgrove, Laurel Ridge, Strait 
Run, Hibernia, and Upper Lowell.

​

At that time, each of these districts had, and maintained, a school which usually con
sisted of one room with the exception of the school in Lowell which contained several.
The first one-room school in Adams Township to fall prey to the dwindling population 
was the old Hibernia School on Cats Creek.

​

For several years after this school was discontinued the children from Hibernia walked 
into Lowell to school each morning, and back over the muddy miles each evening.  
This was before the state passed a law that no child in the grades should walk more 
than two miles to school, nor more than four miles to a high school.

​

James Bartmess was contracted to transport the Hibernia children into Lowell after the 
passage of this law. He was the first bus driver in Adams Township. For conveyance, 
Bartmess had an express wagon and a team of mules. But because the mules ran 
away on one trip and frightened the children, he did not get the job the following year.

​

Charlie Wagner succeeded Bartmess. Later, Vernon Moore was awarded the contract 
to transport the children to Lowell. Moore kept the job for three or four years. He also 
used an express wagon, or hack, with seats along the sides, and a fringed top with 
side curtains that could be put up to protect the children when the weather was cold or 
stormy.

​

Charlie Van Fossen held the contract for the next 17 years. 16 of which he also used a 
horse-drawn wagon or hack. For his final year, he used an old Dodge car because the 
State had passed another regulation that required the use of motor vehicles to trans
port children. His son, Harold, had to fulfill his contract as he was unable to drive.

​

In 1930, the first school bus, as we know them today, went into service in Adams Town
ship. This was an old Model T- Ford bus seating about 20 that Elijah Hupp drove for 
two years. Hupp's second bus was a custom-built one. He had Wallie Spies building 
an enclosed section, with seats along the sides facing each other, on a 1927 Chevrolet 
Truck. The capacity was about 16 plus the driver. On the side, in black lettering, was 
"Cats Creek School Bus".

Graduates of Lowell High School

Original list compiled by Everett Yarnell.

1887
Margaret Lucia Kile
Myra Belle (Kile) Barker


1889
Flora Cathereine (Espensheat) Dean
Anna M. (Wendell) Wendell
Mary F. (Kile) Ray


1895
Mary Elizabeth (Augenstein) Brown
Margaret Mae (Brown) Seward Rutherford
Minne May (Ewing) Lane
Katherine (Hollinger) Rothley
Fred Conrad Landsettle
Florence V. (Pierce) Robinson
Dr. Wilson William Sprague
Lillian May (Stacy) Lansettle
Nora Stella (Trapp) Urhane
Laura Phoebe (Wilking) Savage
Spies Valentine Wilking


1896
Erna Blanche (Becker) Geddes Day
Clarence Winfield Mattern
Laura C. Wendell


1898
Nettie May Hopp
Mary Lillian (Kile) Williams
Maude L. Kile
Anna K. (Spies) Ray


1900
Anna (Augenstein) Newton
Lula May (Best) Gray
Ellen Nancy (Spies) Eddleblute


1901
Caroline (Augenstein) Stengel
Maria Josephine (Mattern) Shaver
Albert Devol Newton
Wilmer P. Newton
Fred H. Stamm

​

1902
Fannie Belle Ewing
Anna Caroline (Hollinger) Miracle
Anna Loella (Trapp) Noe
Stella (Tullius) Huck
George Hovey Wilking


1904
Cecil Rummer Geddes
Oliver Josie (Guise) Spies
Specner Fleck Kile
Belva I. Leake
Albert Frank Wendell
Elizabeth M. (Wilking) Ludwig
Walter Buchannon Wolfram
Nora Lucina (Rietz) Young


1905
Churchill Brenard Augenstein
Lucy L. (Brittigan) Weise
Elsie B. (Hopp) Waxler
Albert H. Rechsteiner
Anna Louise (Rieman) Wilking
Effie May (Vaughn) Sutherland


1906
Howard Milton Augenstein
Josephine “Josie” (Blakely) Hupp
Frank L. Christy
William Philip Engle
Herbert Jordan Leake
Frances Catherine (Rubrake) Lowe
Albert Walter Schimmel
Jeannette Estelle (Schimmel) Gwynne


1907
William Harrison Bauer
Emma Hilda (Bay) Taylor
Bertha Augusta (Rechsteiner) Devoe
Louise M. (Rechsteiner) Daniels
Florence Eugenia (Rice) Thompson
Garth Stanley


1908
Ella R. (Brittigan) Ulm Tressler
Roy Henry Henniger
Clarence Henry Landsittle
Carl U. Rechsteiner
Bertha Wening
Lewis William Wilking


1909
Everett K. McClain
Florence M. Newton
Arthur J. Spies
Lulu Sarah (Spies) Humiston


1910
Louise B. (Engle) Luton
Stella Ceola (Judd) Roush
Mary M. (Peters) Carrell
Sylvia May (Reed) Barth
Harley Grover Schimmel


1911
Rosa Britton
Mary Marietta (Clay) Langvardt
William Marion Mason
Doone Eric Newton
Iva Narrale Phillips
Blanche (Savage) Mason
Lulu C. Wening
Lucille Vera (Wilking) Hirsch


1912
Clara Bell (Dobbins) Marshall
Verna Augusta (Henniger) Hopp
Clarence W. Luton
Clesson Ernest Mason
Leonard Byron Ogle
Anna H. Schilling


1913
Rev. Allen Jacob Daniels
Arthur Clarence Daniels
Herber W. LEake
Louis Walter Leonhart
Blanche Anna (Luton) Butler
John W. McCreery
Ella L. Newton
Karl Arthur Schimmel
Frederick M. Stanley
Audrey Sarah Van Fossen


1914
Julia Evelyn (Dillon) Hall Bennett
Harley Edmund Engle
Frank Riecker Lyne
Freda L. Rechsteiner
Harold Edward Rechsteiner
Dr. Walter R. Rechsteiner
Florence Rebecca (Spies) Kaiser


1915
Loren W. Chandler
Clark C. Davis
Raymond E. Luton
Adolph Daniel Price
Aaron John Rice
Sophia Delphina Tullius
Cornelius Paul Schwendeman


1916
Marian Blanche (Adams) White
Llwelly Francis Engle
Florence Louise (Keeler) Bohl
Dorothy E. (Miller) Allen
Mildred Marion (Schimmel) Debolt


1917
Milon King Brown
Leland Leroy Chandler
Harold Adolph Daniels
Walter Ivan Daniels
Albert E. Drumm
Hilda Emmaline (Eck) Chalfant
Marie Elizabeth (Faust) Gerbert
Hester Hilma (Hollinger) Wickens
Clyde W. Schantz
Jesse Edward Schneider
Richard Julius Schwendeman
Hilda (Wagner) Hamilton
Rolland J. Wharff
Myron Morris Wilking


1918
Otto John Best
Dora E. (Deist) DeLong
Lucille Kathryn (Keeler) Best
George Frederick Metze
Helen Blanche Owen
Osmer Harold Rice
Raymond H. Rubrake
Anna Mildered (Schneider) Best
Clara (Schneider) Reeves
Jessie Mildred (Snyder) Rice


1919
Mary Inez (Atherton) Longfellow
Geoffrey Augenstein
Clarence Wilbur Bauer
Wilma C. Dobbins
Frederick Louis Fritsche
Bernice Louise (Marsch) Wharff
Lela Maria (Miller) Whittlig
Florence (Schneider) Loggie
Grace Agnes (Stacy) Vanderpool
Earl Richard Stanley
Viola M. (Wagner) Hickman
Ella Verna (Wetz) Thompson
Lola Florence Willson
Viola M. (Young) Olton


1920
Doris I. (Dixon) Wilson
William C. Dovenbarger
Berneta L. (Hopp) Huck
Roy William Leonhart
Gertrude Grace (Long) Dyar
Gilbert Carl Ludwig
Harold Edmund Moore
Hazel C. (Owen) Fouss
Emma Frances (Price) Goodman
Raymond S. Rauch
Harold E. Rice
Leona Elnora (Spies) Stanley
Velma Susanna Wetz


1921
Harold Edgar Augenstein
Velma Irene (Augenstein) Lauer Augenstein Wil
son Flieghman
Gerald F. Beach
Charles Ernest Bell
Helen E. (Heckman) Wilson
Mary Margaret (Hughes) Martin
Florence W. Lothes
Carrell J. Schantz
Cecil Frank Schantz
Lena Marie (Scheffel) Augenstein
Arthur L. Stanley
Perley Leonard Wagner
Sylvia Lulu (Weiss) Provance


1922
George Alexander Adams
Bernard Earl Decker
Josephine J. (Dobbins) Arnold
Mildred Malissa (Giffen) Gant
John Milton Hopp
Martha Henrietta (Keeler) Hulburt
Grace E. (Metze) Miller
John F. Murray
Ervin M. Newton
Clara Catherine (Rauch) Long
Verna May (Rice) Wetz
Ralph William Riecker
Bernice E. (Schmidt) Hoskins
Nora M. (Stewart) Vaughn
Gage Henry Spies
Harriet Katherine (Spies) Nixon Hamric
Gladys Lenoa (Turner) Waterman
Roy Lloyd Wagner
Bertha M. (Wickens) Dye Firestone Cross
Forrest D. Wilson
Cora Francis Wooton


1923
Inez C. (Augenstein) Campbell
Eleanor Elizabeth Deist
Hilda (Deist) Long
Helen Anna (Dyar) Adams
Donald Raymond Engle
Selma A. (Henniger) Bowen
Jerald Milton Martenia
Esther Isabel (Moore) Carver
Cornelia Marie S. (Wagner) Boyer
Opal Waller
Matilda (Weisbrod) Apple
Albert J. Wetz
Nora Margaret (Zimmer) Hartshorn


1924
David McClelland Brown
Reva Elizabeth (Davis) Farrell
Dorothy Madge (Dixon) Hupp
Edyth Marie (Dobbins) Augenstein
Marjorie Julia (Forshey) Hess
Irvin Daniel (Fouss) Close
Winifred Isabell (Glass) Drum
Emmett John Henniger
Tracey Everette Hess
Clara Christine (Huck) Pottmeyer
Emma Luella (Kehl) Hawkins
Hilda Wilda (Marsch) Wharff
Walter Raymond Marsch
Wilda Hilda Marsch
Alice Mildred (McCall) Steel
Mabel Wilhelmina Metze
Cecilia Irene (Morris) Cochran
Gladys Margaret (Riecker) Miller
Luella Kathryn Schwartz
Franklin Feldner Young


1925
Ralph Myers Adams
Hazel (Augenstein) Barth
Perley Ray Baker
Emma Louise (Decker) Gween McPeek
Nettie Maria (Giffen) Lee
Harriet Leona (Hartshorne) Hupp
Fred Leland Hopp
Donald Darius Lowe
Merele B. (Lowe) Ludwig
Dale Harris McFarland
Lela (McFarland) Henniger
Edna Kathleen (Newton) Riecker
Dorothy Beatrice (Rubrake) Hupp
Irene Wilma (Schau) Lowe
Charles Bernard (Schmidt) Lewis
Verna I. (Schmidt) Long
Wilbur George Spies
Gertrude Thomas
Howard Elmer Wilking


1926
Marjorie Mayme (Arbaugh) Cabot
Clara L. (Bauerbach) Huck
Frances Anna (Brooker) Lang
Rose Luella (Brown) Payne
Clarence Reginold Deist
Mabel Dorothy (Deist) Wilson
Edna (Dobbins) Bowden
Selma Marie (Fouss) Roe
Lela Ruth (Henniger) Oliver
Edmund D. Hopp
Mary Josephine (Kern) Baumhard
Ralph Victor Ludwig
Herbert Carl Marsch
Arthur Russell Moore
Howard William Murrey
Basil Stephen Rummer
Mary Bessie (Stengel) Keeler


1927
Myrtle Gladolia (Augenstein) Rainer Belt
Thelma L. (Augenstein) Coffman
Clyde Paul Bertram
Ida Elizabeth (Crumbacker) Wooster
Hester C. (Dixon) Murray
Rolland Becker Fritsche
Grace Louise (Henniger) Workman
Ronald Andrew Hartshorne
Ralph William Lorentz
Frances (McCracken) McFarland
Lawrence A. Monaghan
Nellie L. (Morgenstern) Stengel
Karl Richard Riecker
Irene Emma (Schimmel) Paull
Florence Caroline (Schwartz) Willson
Ruth Ann (Schwendeman) Lang
Ruth Irene (Tilton) Pickenpaugh
James William (Way) Mallett


1928
Peter Monroe Armstrong
Ralph Roy Augenstein
Frances Clara Elizabeth (Bohl) Close
Babetta Anna Brehaus
Blanche Idella (Brown) Davis
Dorman Dean Carver
Percy G. Chandler
Luella Mason (Dobbins) Strachan
William Clyde Gant
George Edward Giffen
Isabelle Marie (Hopp) Pflug
Eileen Beulah (Kidd) Boyd
Sarah Elizabeth (Leake) Ong Wilson
Roy Albert (Marsch) Barlow
Norma Roselin (Riecker) Findess McCann
Virgil Jo (Schmidt) Wilking
Frank W. Shook
George Herman Walters Sr.
Ferne D. (Ward) Weber
Lydia Kathryn (Young) Wehrs
Ruth Emma (Young) Campbell

​

1929
Isaac Robert Cowell
Sylvan Gerald Engle
Bernard Otto Henniger
Clyde George Ludwig
Hilda Irene (Morgenstern) Stengel
Ralph Francis Schaad
Virginia Lucille (Schimmel) Hart
Carl Leland Schletzer
Laura Bernice (Schletzer) Wetz
Ralph John Schwendeman
Sylvester E. Stevens


1930
Howard Leo Brown
Mildred Agatha (Dobbins) Gearhart
Mary Elizabeth Forshey
William Donald Harris
Carl William Knoch
Glenna Pauline (Lowe) Strawser
Lawrence Donald Owen
Elbert Rice Tilton
Marian Emily (Spies) Jordan
Vaughn Elliot Stacy
Elsie Rose (Van Fossen) Matthews
Ernest Daniel Wetz
Mary Margaret (Young) Schletzer


1931
Ruth Irene (Augenstein) Beardsley
Glen William Engle
Florence Louise (Fleming) Engle
Theodore Cecil Gant
Esther Elizabeth (Gardner) McDermont
Rodney Russell Grandstaff
Melvin L. Kendle
Laverne (Knoch) Close
Norman Laughery
Paul Henry Laughery
Ruth Helena (Lowe) Young Morris
Harriett S. (McCarty) Decker
Glenna Mae Miller
Phyllis Virginia (Murrey) Augenstein
Glenn E. Powell
Frances (Riecker) Miller
Pearl Eleanor (Schmidt) Sergent
Cecil Eugene Schwendeman
Martha Louise (Wendell) Gwynn
H. Ramona (Young) Lorenz


1932
Frieda Louise (Augenstein) Howell
Marian (Baesel) Schimmel
Florence M. (Bartmess) Dobbins
Gretchen (Beach) Luthy
Norma Evelyn (Born) Schwendeman
Myron Robert Deist
Harvey Llewellyn Dutton
Beatrice Marie Engle
Julia Daisy (Hartshorne) Fleming
Carol K. (Knoch) Wagner
Frances Irwin Norris
Juanita Isabelle (Roff) Dye
Charles Gilbert Schimmel
Ruth Beryl (Schmidt) Kile Miller
Merle Schultheis
Donald George Spies
Carol Lenore (Thompson) Lauer
Norman Ellis Wetz
Helen Catherine (Zimmer) Hess


1933
Rettie Irene (Ball) Farnsworth
June (Bell) Herron
Mary Kathrine (Brooker) Girton
Lester Bingham Carver
Robert Matthew Dyar
Laura Mae Giffen
Iva Pearl (Griffen) Stacy
James Robert Jackson
Robert Clark Kile
Maude Nellie (Lowe) Jackson
Arvilla M. (Mahoney) Wesp
Laura Elizabeth (Metze) Brooks
Dale Eugene Pfile
Juanita Davis (Rummer) Tilton
Bernard Elmer Schwartz
Donald Stanley Stephens


1934
Leland Henry Brooker
Charles Willard Brown
Harold Eugene Decker
Geraldine Louise (Dixon) Rummer
Marion Margaret (Engle) Hoffart
Mary Elizabeth (Knoch) Orndoff
Joseph Paul Mallett
Ella May Marsch
Harold Arthur Mason
Virgil Dwight Rof
Frank Dwight Schmidt
John Jacob Schwendeman
Jeanette Isabelle (Spies) Stevens
Glen Eugene Van Fossen
William Milton Wendell
Francis Edward Wetz
Stacil Merritt Wickens
Joseph Donald Willson
Jean Caroline (Young) Woodford


1935
Arthur Augenstein
Lucille Johnetta (Bauer) Hupp
Manley Leroy Davis
Homer William Dixon
Vernon Adam Ludwig
Charles D. Mahoney
William Joseph McCreery
Evelyn Lenore Schwartz
George Mahlon Snyder
Jeanette Elizabeth (Waller) Roff
John Patrick Weisend
Julia Anna Weisend


1936
Elsie Lucille (Barlow) Batten
Mary Florence (Barlow) McCarty
Benjamin E. Bowden
Waldemar Otto Brehaus
Genevieve I. (Dyar) Drum
Jeanette Elizabeth (Engle) Glover
Gladys Ann (Henniger) Young
Edmund R. Holdren
Mary C. (Lorentz) Hess
Anna L. (Mason) Smith
Velma Virginia (Newlon) Tolley Lyons
Mae Marie (Pfile) Mitchell
Roy William Schletzer
Anna Marie (Strahler) Spindler
Odessa B. (Thorne) Sprague
Mary Carolyn (Van Fossen) Ball
Frank Richard Young
Karl Rice Wagner


1937
Raymond Wade Bartmess
Kathleen Louise (Brown) Schmidt
McKinley Joshua Burke
Clifford Hughes Chandler
Pearl L. (Douthitt) Wolfe Fox
Marian Virginia “Jo” (Forshey) Black
Mary Belle (Hupp) Mallett
Robert Louis Long
Margaret Magdalena (McCreery) Develo
Ernest B. Miller
Elizabeth Ann (Norris) Zimmerman
Ruth (Schimmel) Roush Chandler
Louis Paul Schwendeman
Herschel Eugene Thorne
Robert D. Wendell
Robert Earl Willson


1938
Dean Edward Baesel
Myrtle Lucille (Barnes) Ullman
Delsie Lorene (Dobbins) Mathers
Opal Marie (Dovenbarger) Stephens
Anna Elizabeth (Drumm) Bartmess
Roger B. Dyar
Frances Jeanette (Henniger) Parsons
Joan Elizabeth (Huck) Hodgdon
Harold J. Long
Robert N. Lothes
Lewis Homer Mallett
Edna Leora (Miller) Weber
Mary Louise (Moore) Brown
Lester Blaine Schau
Clarence Delmar Schmidt Jr.
Elsie Lois (Schwendeman) Grimm
Mildred Louise (Smith) Gorrell
Kathryn Anna (Stengel) Gerken
Mary Eleanor (Strode) Ramsey Thackery
Jennie Ruth (Ward) Morse


1939
Kathryn Aliene (Chandler) Baker
Charles H. Devoe
Charles Regis Engle
Vernice (Hanson) Beardmore
Warren Glen Hunter
Francis Raymond Lang
Bertha Independence (Lee) Brown
Robert L. Mason
Jean Eloise (McCathern) Knoch
Helen Carolyn Norris
Mildred Sybil (Rummer) Mincks Chandler
Edna Mary (Schwendeman) Miller
Anna L. (Shock) Baker
Virginia Lee Stacy
Earl Welland Wagner
Robert Pelt Way
Roy Orlon Wetz
Charles Henry Young


1940
Wilbur Carl Baker
Marcille Katherine (Born) Sinclair
John Henry Delong
Marguerite Helen (Dobbins) O’Brien
Harold W. Henniger
Chathrine Philomena (Huck) Arnold
Mary Elizabeth (Huck) Olsen
Rita Mary (Huck) Bishop
Edna Ellen (Hupp) Schwendeman
Helen Marie (Mallett) Davis
Gladys Ione (Mahoney) Lothes
Mary Louise (McCreery) Hirschberger
Mary Nebra Monaghan
Hanna Marie (Norris) Hinton
Robert George Pfile
Kathrny Juanita (Reynolds) VanFossen
Walter Dale Schau
Marion Mildred (Schwendeman) Hynes
Jean Margaret (Stacy) Delong
Thomas Fuller Stacy
Jewell Kathryn (Wagner) Burdette
Joan Elizabeth (Wagner) Young


1941
Fern (Cross) Ogle
Norman Robert Douthitt
Roy E. Dovenbarger
Billie Dorothy (Drum) Stewart
Mary Louise (Engle) Strahler
Monica Esther (Engle) Hoffert
Mary Gladys (Hockenberry) Rummer
Ralph Richard Hockenberry
Ruth (King) Milner
Ralph William Long
Daisy Opal (Miller) Mitchell
Marjorie Louise (Price) Miller
Eunice Elizabeth (Schaad) Taylor
Kelly Dennis Schau
Vivian E. Schwartz
Clair Joseph Schwendeman
Mary Mildred (Schwendeman) Arnold
Evelyn (Shock) Geyer
Ruth Mae (Stengel) Brawley
Joseph J. Strickland
Howard Way Jr.
Alberta Rose (Weisand) Kiggans Booras


1942
Marie (Augenstein) Koorenny Gardiner
William Philip Engle Jr.
Lucy Justine (Huck) Long
Margaret Mary (Huck) Miller
Lela Ruth (Hughes) Remleigh
Robert Fulton Holdren
Martha Lee (Lothes) Card
John Willliam McCreery
Mary Bonita (Monaghan) Wilson Leach Spencer
Ralph Joseph Morgenstern
Marie Loriane (Parker) Hupp
Edna Alena (Reynolds) Laughery
Donald Eugene Rice
John Frances Tullius
Eva Mae West
Frances Eleanor (Wickens) Coffman


1943
Donald Lee Baker
Eloise Frances (Burke) White
Bernard Ray Delong
Helen Jean (Fonderau) Tornes
Lela Ruth (Forshey) Schreiderer
Denzil Wayne (Hodge) Sprague
Hilda Elizabeth (Huck) Arnold
Juanita Marie (Hughes) Wetz
Frank Charles Leonhart Jr.
Harley Ray Pitt
Nelson Leroy Rummer
Lucille Therese (Schwendeman) Pottmeyer
Leone (Shock) Holodnak
Frank Lloyd Stacy
Leo Ovid Strickland
James Warren Wagner
Mary “Joy” (Way) Roby


1944
Otis Dean Ball
Ruth Irene (Dovenbarger) Ford
John Donald Engle
Richard Roy Engle Jr.
Harlan Hameric
Margaret Ann (Huck) Bowen
Mary Josephine (Huck) Cox
Hilda Ann (King) Kelly
Maxine (Lowe) Stoke
Isaac Jacob Mason
Joanna Elizabeth (McCreery) Pitt
Doris Irene (Miller) Gregory
Kathryn M. (Perry) Roberts
Neil Raymond Roff
Ruth Eleanor (Schaad) Strahler
Erma M. Schwendeman
Ruth Katherine Way
Mary F. Weisend
Richard Dean Wetz
Robert Woods


1945
Gilbert John Boice
Verona K. (Bowen) Lukens
Jessica (Brannon) Tayler
Dorothy Marie (Brooker) Gantley
Ethel May (Burke) Rush
Bernard Paul Engle
Donna Pearl (Hanlon) Arn
Patricia Mae (Hess) Hein
Helen Jean (Hinton) Dowler
Gertrude Elizabeth (Huck) Arnold
Leora Mary (Huck) Arnold
Jack Dillon Hughes
Joseph Henry Lang
Robert L. Leonhart
Laura Jean (McCord) Rummer
Clifford E. Bert McNabb
Dulcie Naomi (Newlon) Perry
Mary Ellen (Owen) Schmidt
Elizabeth Theresa Rabe
Mary Kathryn (Rauch) Hughes
Doris Marie (Rummer) Treadway
Regis Harold Schaad
Dr. Harold John Schwendeman
Donna Jean (Sherbourne) Engle Quimby
Naomi Jean (Shock) Stevens
Ruby Evelyn (Wetz) Truelsen Fugazi


1946
Vivian Frances (Arbaugh) Hupp
Carl Eugene Augenstein
Marjorie Evelyn (Augenstein) Conner
Hazel Mae (Brannon) King
Dorothy Marie (Burke) Payton
Mary Louise (Dovenbarger) Pugh
Arthur Leroy Hopp
Jeanette Lee (Hopp) Luton
Maxine (Huck) Leroy
Mildred Ida (Huck) Schwendeman
James Willis Hughes
Arthur Dean Hunter
Delores Jean (Hupp) Mahoney
Jeanette Ruth (Leonhart) Matthews
Norma Pearl (Lowe) McCarty
Alma Jeanette (McCreery) Ginther
Philip Richard McNabb
Harold Nelson Rummer
Ellen Ruth (Tullius) Hall
Walter Gerald Wagner
Esther Elizabeth (Wheeler) Carter


1947
Enid Loretta (Dalton) Burke
Mary Lou (Drum) Mincks
Jessie Ann (Eichkorn) Bechtel
Hilda Laverene (Eller) McNabb
Betty Irene (Hinton) DeLong
Treva Leone (Hughes) Long
Ramond Beatrice (Hupp) Rummer
Robert Jean (Lee) Roff Fish
Regis Harold Long
Rosemary (Luton) Lehnerd
Robert Richard Murray
Thelma Jeanne (Rhodes) Way
Glen Leory Ruff
Arthur Dean Sherbourne
Cyril Longstreth Wilson Jr.
Wayne Walter Worthington


1948
Anthony Nicholas Brooker
Patrick Joseph Brooker
Erma Maxine (Chandler) Armstrong
Patricia Anne (Engle) Ingram
Mary Charlotte (Fouss) Wagner
Arlene Lucille (Hanlon) Ball
Clifford Jack Henniger
Dawson Tracy Hess
Fay Nelle (Holdren) Hill
Geneva Mae (Hopp) Hughes Bradley
Clement Joseph Huck Jr.
Mary Geraldine (Huck) O'Linn
Rosemary Martha (Leonhart) Lang
Charles L. Lukens
Richard Wayne McNabb
Patty Lou (Monagan) Murray
Annie Jean (Powell) Angle
Joseph Frederick Powell
Robert Edward Rechsteiner
Joan Luch (Schwendeman) Wilson
Betty Lou (Strickland) Sarver
Dean William Welsch
Floyd James Williams
Edith Ann (Woods) Reid Pickens
Jack Owen Best
Cyrus Bowen


1949
Hilda Ann (Brooker) Gebhart
Rosemary (Brooker) Heiss
Inez Jacqueline (Chandler) Mayle
Naomi Joan (Chandler) Scipio
Donald Dean Dennis
William Lucius Dunn Jr.
Joseph Raymond Engle
Donald Dippel Flowers
Jeanette Marie (Hartshorn) Powell
Cletis Catherine (Hendershot) Rummer
Helen Elizabeth (Hopp) Wilson
Martin Herbert Huck
Harley Dean Hughes
Evelyn Mildred (Lang) Neill
Justine Cathereine (Lang) Tornes
Mary Elizabeth (Lang) Huck
Gerald Francis Long
Barbara Anne (Lothes) Dernberger
Frank Anthony McCreery
Harold Walter Neill
Linnie Pauline (Perry) Kmorvwski
Anna Louise (Rechsteiner) Jobes
Robert Gordon Rhodes
David Allen Rice
Donald Raymond Rummer
Elizabeth Lou (Schau) Casto
Kenneth Shock
Cecil Eugene Simon
Rose Ellen Noel (Wagner) Haynes


1950
Charlotte Marie Basnett
Lavis Mildred (Batten) Welch
Lloyd Beardsley
Betty Ruth (Burke) Stewart
Rosemary M. (Gerken) Huck
Frederick Max Hartshorn
Eloise Marie (Hill) Ragan
Jacqueline Faye (Hopp) Dunn Schulte
Joseph Leroy Huck
Ronald Lynn Hupp
Esther Anna (Long) Flowers
George Thomas Long
Betty Lou (Lowe) Weber Boessna
Helen Gertrude (McCreery) Jurden
Ramona Ruth (Murray) Rummer
Marjorie May (Pettibone) Campbell
Roberta Jean (Phelps) Smith
Hurd Clinton Pitt
June (Powell) Hunt
Kenneth Ray Prunty
Jessie Ann (Rubrake) King
Deloris (Sheppard) Hughes
Joan Dorothy (Shock) Powell
Norman Leo Smith
Mary Lou (Spence) McCreery
Anthony Alfred Tornes
Betty Jean (Way) Reed Van Hines
Martha Mae (Huck) West


1951
Allen Ray Baker
Emmett Ray Ball
William Warner Basnett
Arthur Andrew Best
Raymond Albert Brooker
Mary Louise (Burke) Hughes
Samuel Clifford Gant
Carl Duane Hager
Joretta Jean (Hendershot) Kiggans
Albert Eugene Hill
John William Hinton
Marian Justine (Huck) Statler
Norbert Raymond Huck
Marilyn Jane (Hughes) Swaney Beebe
Lula Mae (Hutchins) Harmon Ritchie
Glen Donald Lang
Patricia Ann (Lang) Stahley
Richard Joseph Lang
Geraldine Emmaline (Rhodes) Turner Forshey
Esther Louise (Rummer) Rauch
Thomas Lee Shank
Marjorie Opal (Sherbourne) Garvin
Donald Michael Stengel
Marian (Stengel) Bauerbach
Donald Lewis Townsend
Esther Elizabeth (Wheeler) Moore


1952
William Harold Ackley
Geraldine Helen Beach
Joseph Alan Best
Hazel (Bolen) Butler
Roy Brannon
Edward Walter Brooker
Shirley Ann (Burke) Norris
Joy Lou (Dunn) Lent
Ruth (Hanlon) Henniger Gossett
Norma Jean (Henniger) Stephens Perry
Robert Henniger
Charles Thomas Huck
Donald Eugene Hopp
Helen Claire (Lang) Wilson
John F. Lang
Joanna Nellie (Leonhart) Strahler
Virgil Leory Lott
Norma Lee (Miller) Gant
Charles Earl Offenberger
John Francis Rauch
Jerry Lee Turner
Gerald Sherbourne
Lou Ann (Schilling) Camden
Shirley Winifred (Wagner) Johnson
Jane Anne (Woodford) Rauch


1953
Donald Francis Bauerbach
Kathryn Joan (Beardsley) Yoho
Bernard Clarence Brooker
William Albert Brooker
Emma Kathryn (Engle) Dunn
Ethel May (Hager) Wagner
Gerald Edgar Hill
John Richard Hopp
Sophia Lucy (Huck) Schoeppner
Eleanor Maxine (Lang) Warnock
Jacob Leo Lang
Paul Joseph Lang
Margaret Jane (Leonhart) Beardsley
Bernard Lawernce Long
Edwin Louis Long
Rosemary Elizabeth (McDermott) Arnold
Robert Leonard McNabb
Naomi Jean (Monaghan) Wilson
Polly Emily (Perry) Goss
James Robert Pettibone
Robert Leo Prunty
Evelyn Eloise (Rummer) Rice
Garnet Mae (Schau) Hose
Rosemary (Schilling) Yost
Mary Lou (Schimmel) Arnold
Mary Ellen (Shank) Schwendeman
Jack Allan Smith
Shirley Arlene (Stalnaker) Ullman
Charles Henry Stengel
Irene June (Stengel) Huck
Norma Jean (Stengel) O'Linn
John William Strahler
Harold Leroy Taylor
Wayne Bernard Wagner
Selma Lucille (Way) Worthington
Nanette Rosemary (Weatherbee) McCabe Flores
Carolyn Ann (Wilking) Engle
Edward Franklin Young


1954
Charlene Kay (Baker) Abicht
Mary Kathryn (Bauerbach) Rhodes Nickolson
Shirley Marie (Batten) Goudy Martin
Ora Jean (Binegar) Tilton
Darlene Garnet (Bosner) Perry McIntire
Janice Jean (Carpenter) Haught
Dora Jean (Coffman) Shank
Howard Eugene Dunn
Norma Jeanette (Dyar) Theiman
Carolyn Jane (Engle) McCauley
James Joseph Engle
James Lawrence Fouss
C. Gary Harris
Jack William Hendershot
Donald G. Henniger
Grace Elizabeth (Hockenberry) Long
Patty Ann (Hopp) Brown
Albert Paul Huck
James Theodore Hupp
Bernard George Lang
Gerald Andrew Lang
Charles Joseph Long
Raymond Lewis Long
Jacqueline Sue (Lowe) Myers
Jean Elizabeth (McCarty) Brown
Eleanor Pearl (McNutt) Philips
Lloyd Leon Montcrief
Patricia Ann (Pottmeyer) Carr
Elizabeth Louise (Schilling) Huggins Hopper
Helen Louise (Schimmel) Huck
Ronald Lee Smith
Larry William Tilton
Howard Raymond Wagner


1955
Marjorie Mae (Ackley) DeLong
Robert Charles Fisher Ball
Joseph Brelsford Beach
Gladys Ellen (Brooker) Schilling
Louis David Brooker
Helen (Clegg) Schoeppner
James Ralph Hanlon
Donald Duane Hart
Dorothy Louise (Henniger) McAtee Delancy
Jeannette Mary (Huck) Schwendeman
Virgil Albert Huck
Gene Arnold Hupp
Bernard Frances Klinger
Shirley Ann (Lang) Stollar Oliver
Thomas Joseph Lang
Marjorie Helen (Pottmeyer) Crissen
Harold Lee Schau
Eloise Mary (Tornes) Mulbach
Sue Ellen (Travis) Klinger
Herman Eugene Wagner
Lynne Donald Wagner
Norma Lou (Wilking) Davis
Roger Young Woodford


1956
Clyde Leroy Ackley
Helen Louise (Autherson) Offenberger Ebersbach
James Paul Bauerbach
Paul Henry Brooker
Patricia (Eckelberger) Pottmeyer
Thomas Giles Engle
Patricia Arlene (Fouss) Woodford
Carolyn Rose (Hanlon) Littleton
Walter Edward Klinger
James Lee Naylor
Andrew Glen Rauch
Larry Dean Richard
David John Schilling
William Donald Smith
William Paige Stalnaker
Richard Francis Yarnell


1957
Lloyd Eugene Ackley
Brent Dennis Augenstein
Frances Ruth (Autherson) Roe
Glenna Marie Fisher Ball
Jon Dean Coffman
Gerald Francis Dyar
Bruce Delano Fleming
Gary Lee Hart
Erma Jean (Hill) Blume
Anna Mae (Hopp) Huck
Jerome Clarence Huck
Joseph Clarence Huck
Perry Jo (Jarrell) Babcock
Scottie Lynn (Koch) Stalnaker
Eugene Francis Lang
Irene Mary (Lang) Barton
Ruth Helen (Long) Rhodes
Treva Pearl (Lott) Mossack
Marilyn Moore (Peoples) Scharff
Gerald Virgil Roff
Edward Otto Schilling
Donna Mae (Thomas) Lang Wagner
Donna May (Tilton) Rigby
Kenneth Ralph Tilton
Mary Carolyn (Tornes) Zwick
Ruth Frances (Tornes) Morgan
Mildred Eileen (Wagner) Delancy Seese Chandler
Ralph Leo Wagner
Etta Mae Westbrook
Carolyn Lois (Wetz) Stewart
William Charles Wilson


Unknown
Mabel Gertrude (Baker) Hughes
Thelma Virginia (Basnett) Sheppard
Glen F. Boice
George Wagner
Robert Ward
Wesley Mincks Way

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