New & Cool at HCHM

Recently a small pair of boys pants were donated to HCHM, still in the original store box. They were given to Henry  Frederick Dudte born in 1914 to John L and Anna M Dudte.  He grew up in Highland Township, Harvey County, Kansas.

These pants were given to him “to be worn on his First Birthday,” but it appears he never wore them.

H. Fred Dudte married Hazel Williams on May 30, 1937.  The couple raised their family in Harvey County. Fred died November 14, 2008 and Hazel on April 6, 2015.  They are both buried in the Highland Cemetery, Harvey County, Ks.

We know from photos that boys clothing has changed over the years.  In the 1890s, mothers continued the common practice of dressing their small boys in dresses or smocks with ruffles. It was not uncommon for siblings be dressed alike.

Eva & Reed Weimer, Sedgwick, Ks, 1890. Tripp Photo, HCHM Photo Archives.

Warren Kinney?, 1910. Frank Spangler Collection, HCHM Photo Archives.

At the turn of the century children’s clothing began to shift to clothes specific to children and gender specific Dresses, smocks and ruffles were less common.

Uncle David, John, Malcom, and Warren Nicholson, 1924. Nicholson Family Collection. HCHM Photo Archives.

Unidentified boy in a yard, ca. 1900. HCHM Photo Archives.

Unidentified boy, 1961. HCHM Photo Archives.

 

Purple & Gold and the Lead We’ll Hold!

“Purple & Gold,
Purple & Gold,
We’re in the Lead,
and the Lead We’ll Hold”

*NHS Cheer from 1914

NHS Football Letter, unknown date, HCHM School Collection, HCHM, Newton, Ks

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator 

Recently the question was asked: ‘Have the Newton High School colors always been black and gold?’

The first NHS Annual that is available at HCHM is The Mirror from 1904 and although class colors are mentioned, school colors are not.

The Mirror, Newton High School Annual, 1904. HCHM Archives, Newton, Ks

Newton High School, 1904, The Mirror, NHS Annual, HCHM Archives, Newton, Ks

Purple & Gold

“Put on your purple bonnet,
With Newton High School on it,
And we’ll all get ready for the fray.
Can’t you see us Grinning
Don’t you know we’re winning
On the great Foot Ball Day.”

The first time school colors are mention is in the 1914 Newtone. A new High School was completed in 1914 with “one of the best gymnasiums and basket-ball courts in Kansas.” This is also the year that Frank Lindley was hired as all around coach for NHS.

The Newtone, Newton High Annual, 1914. HCHM Archives, Newton, Ks.

Postcard of the new Newton High School, 1914.

The page of “Yells and Songs” clearly mention purple and gold.

Page of Cheers in The Newtone, NHS Annual, 1914, HCHM Archives, Newton, Ks

NHS Letter, unknown date, HCHM School Collection, HCHM, Newton, Ks

1932 Basketball

Unknown date, HCHM School Collection, HCHM, Newton, Ks

1935 Basketball

Purple and gold wool sweater worn by Lucile Mitchell Miller on game days.

Lucile Mitchell Miller, 1920.

The colors for Newton High School remained purple and gold until 1945.

Navy Blue & Gold

John Ravenscroft returned to Newton High after receiving an honorable discharge on May 8, 1945 to coach basketball. He later recalled how the school colors were changed from purple and gold to dark navy blue and gold.

“I told Mr. Lindley that the school needed a set of 15 new basketball uniforms and warm-ups since none had been purchased throughout the war.  Mr. Lindley and I both knew that the school was having serious trouble with the old purple and gold uniforms because the purple had faded to different shades in the same set.”

The two men discussed this issue with the supplier Campbell Sporting Goods, but the supplier could not “guarantee that  sets of uniforms made of different orders of material from their suppliers would be the same shade of purple.”

Lindley and Ravenscroft agreed on dark navy blue and gold for the new uniforms for the 1945-1946 school year.

NHS Warm Up, HCHM Sports Collection.

Ravenscroft met with  student body officers to show the color swatches.  The students agreed with the dark blue and gold colors and new uniforms and warm-ups were ordered.

The student body met in September 1945 to confirm the color change. When viewing the color swatches again, a mistake was made and the students thought the color was black.  So the colors voted on September 1945 were black and gold.

Ravenscroft explained:

 “I was not involved in the confirmation and did not know of the error until after the 1945 State Championship in March 1946. Mr Lindley said, ‘Forget it.  Plain dull black is horrible, but if they can’t tell the difference, they won’t know the difference.'”

Throughout Ravenscroft’s tenure at NHS, the uniforms were always navy blue and gold.

Black & Gold

After Ravenscroft left in 1958, the new athletic director, Curtis Fischer, ordered new uniforms with the colors black and gold, not realizing the earlier mistake. He was “horrified when he saw the new uniforms in plain black instead of colorful, shiny, light reflecting dark navy blue.”

The supplier would not take the uniforms back so the school lived with “dull, light-absorbing black ever since.”

Susan Griffith Agel  Letter 1972.

1st NHS Girls Basketball Team, 1972, Women’s Sports In Harvey County

Sources:

  • “From Purple to Black: by John Ravenscroft in Buller, Curtis.  Can’t You Hear the Whistle Blowing?  Hesston, Ks:  Prestige Printing, 1997, HCHM Archives, HCHM, 200 N. Poplar, Newton, Ks. p. 94.
  • NHS Yearbook Collection, HCHM Archives, Newton, Ks, 1904-1940s.
    • The Mirror, 1904.
    • Newtone, 1914.

Past Posts about NHS Basketball

“In Memoriam:” Soldiers of the Great War

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

In the May 19, 1919 issue of the Evening Kansan Republican the editors printed a “Report of the Committee on Memoirs at Service Held  Sunday, May 18, 1919.” In this report, Harvey County soldiers that had died during the Great War were remembered. The issue gave a brief description of each man.  The issue also included  “The Complete Roster of Harvey Co. World War Soldiers.”

Evening Kansan Republican, 19 May 1919, p. 1.

Based on the information in the newspaper article more soldiers from Harvey County died from pneumonia, than died in action, illustrating the  devastating effect of the 1918 Influenza. Six were killed in action, five others died on foreign soil, and 14 in the United States.

Postcard, 1918-1919

The  men are listed below.   In the coming year,  watch for stories of these men to mark the 100th Anniversary of the Great War.

Killed in Action

Died of Pneumonia on Foreign Soil

  • Rudolph August Carl Steffen
  • James Edward Taylor
  • Joseph P Trego
  • John G. Schaplowsky
  • William E. Dreier

Died of Pneumonia on US soil

  • MacArthur B. Brush
  • Irvin Haury
  • Herman Heinrich Christian Green
  • Emmett H Neuway
  • Roy Lee Pittman
  • Max Reynolds
  • Lee Elmer Shepherd
  • Cleo Walter Miline
  • Earl Floyd Alfred Hood
  • Melvin Savage
  • Burton Elmer Cochran
  • James Shea

Accidental Death on US Soil

 

Parade, 1919.
Newton Main Street, Old Mill in the background.

Complete Roster

The Evening Kansan Republican  also included “A Complete Roster of Harvey County World War Soldiers.”

Evening Kansan Republican, 19 May 1919, p. 6.