An answer for the question of the day
Don Cantrell
Mervin Greiwe is a long-time reader of the Daily Pilot sports and a
splendid Harbor High athlete down through past years.
Greiwe, Class of ‘45, like many, has followed the Pilot’s Sports Hall
of Fame and finally contributed a strong recommendation.
After a flow of compliments over past honorable folks, Greiwe poses a
fair question. He wants to know about an old friend of his--George
Yardley, one of the great names to emerge from Harbor High and
professional ranks as an all-star basketball player. Will he be named?
The Pilot staff will long remember “King Georgie,” but even if there
was ever a lapse of memory relative to honors, he would still stand tall
in the NBA Hall of Fame with all the other significant pros at
Springfield, Mass.
I’ve checked it out, and I’ve been assured that yes, King Georgie will
be inducted and before you can say Happy New Year!
Over past years from the 1940s, Greiwe’s dad took good care of many
Harbor High teens by allowing them to work on their hot rods at his old
service station on 30th Street and Newport Boulevard.
Another old friend of Yardley’s from Balboa Island, Bill “Dutch” Van
Horn, still recalls Greiwe’s risky scooter race from one of the Island to
the other one night.
He barely lost, but Van Horn thinks the best thing is that the pair
didn’t get pulled over by the local gendarmes.
A recent mention of the late Horace Parker who once published the
Paisano Press, which produced numerous tidbits of area heritage, recalled
one past amusement from the late 1930s when he was coaching Cee level
football at Harbor High.
The young athletes were well-behaved about any mention of beer or
cigarettes. They were totally forbidden in those days, and there was no
trace of drugs, either.
One afternoon, an innocent Cee footballer named Edward C. Stephens,
who later became a running guard for the legendary fullback Hal Sheflin,
started to enter Allen’s Drug Store on Balboa Island, then quickly edged
out and disappeared.
The shock was spotting his grid coach, Mr. Parker, sitting at the soda
counter smoking a ciggie.
With a laugh in recent years, Stephens related the story. He admitted
he had kept it a secret all these years, but thought he was clear to
convey the incident now.
A kid would not have considered walking up to the coach and saying
something like, “Hi, coach. Boy, it sure looks smoky in here.”
We were able to share one amusement with Frank Hamilton before he
passed away in October at his home in Fort Walton, Florida.
Over the years, we had a habit in sports stories of referring to him
as the 6-foot-4 southpaw pitcher. In fact, he pitched Harbor High to its
only baseball title in 1948.
The school had opened in 1930 and won numerous titles in football,
basketball and track and field, but not baseball.
Nonetheless, Hamilton laughed on the phone, then told this corner that
he did reach 6-5 after high school days, but he was no longer playing
baseball after that.
Hamilton was always a class “A” gentleman and highly regarded by all.
Ruthelyn Plummer, a former classy swimmer at Harbor High, noted song
leader in 1942 and a one-time Mayor of Newport Beach, left commendable
marks out of World War II.
In the spring of ‘42, Plummer and many kids out of physical education
classes were bussed to abandoned farms in the area to pick strawberries
and vegetables. The crops were left after the government took the
Japanese-American farm families off to internment camps like Arizona,
Utah and New Mexico until after the war ended.
Plummer was always impressed by the official action to save all the
valued crops.
In World War II, she worked as a riveter at a McDonnell-Douglas
airplane plant. One source said she still finds herself inspecting the
rivets on airplanes before she steps aboard.
There was no swimming pool at Harbor High in the early ‘40s, by
Plummer said the swimming athletes would work out down in the harbor near
Lido Isle.
She said the coach generally organized the team and events with a
clipboard en route to a rival school on the bus.
The pool was finally constructed in 1949 and the coach assigned to
take charge was Al Irwin, who graduated from Harbor High in 1936 and
advanced to College of the Pacific.
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