THE PIONEERS

THE PIONEERS


We are the Pioneers because we were the first. We started school in tents due to the steel strike in 1955. We were the only class - all freshmen, then in the following years, always the upperclassmen. Because we were such a small class, we all knew one another. We chose the school colors, uniform, and wrote our alma matter. We published the first yearbook and named it "Esprit" for our sense of spirit. And we were the first class to celebrate a 50th reunion - still the Pioneers. How wonderful to reminisce and reconnect with one another!

50TH REUNION

50TH REUNION

PHS 50 YEAR SCHOLARSHIP FUND

PHS 50-YEAR CLUB SCHOLARSHIP FUND


Following our 50-year class reunion in March 2009, the class of '59 gifted Providence High School with a special scholarship fund to be used for financially-needy students. This fund is called: PHS 50-Year Club Scholarship Fund. This fund will last in perpetuity as long as we, and other classes as they reach the 50-year anniversary of their graduations, continue to contribute to it. If you are able and willing to contribute to our alma mater, will you please designate "PHS 50-Year Scholarship Fund" as the payee on your check or credit card gift. With our assistance the scholarship will go on forever -- and the Class of 1959 will always be remembered.


Thursday, January 14, 2010


We didn't send out a Christmas card picture this year as we usually take the whole family at Thanksgiving when we are in St. Helena. This year Tony, Rachael and Lucie arrived for a week but not until December 24th when we finally were able to get the whole family together. So here it is...
Hope you all had a wonderful Christmas.
Happy New Year from the Poer Family

Apologies to Barbara from me. She sent this 2 weeks ago, and I forgot to post it. :( CA

Monday, December 28, 2009

Greetings from Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Dear Teachers and Classmates: How was your Christmas ? I hope that it was great ??? Sending you many hugs and good fortune in the coming years !!!!
Simon and Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from Carol Ann

Our family from Unalakleet, Alaska is spending the Christmas holidays with us here in Anchorage. We will be in California with ALL our kids and grandkids in January for our first grandchild's wedding and my dad's 100th birthday. An exciting month. We have been busy since our reunion in March - lots of travel - all family related. We took an Alaskan Cruise with Peter's sister and our brother-in-law to celebrate Peter's 70th birthday; it was grand!
I wish you all a very happy 12 days of Christmas and many blessings in 2010. CarolAnn



Thursday, December 24, 2009

FROM SUZANNE SORRELL SILBERTASCH

Dear Classmates : So very sorry that I was unable to see you at the reunion because I had to have bottom surgery the day before. My only claim to fame is that I completed 8 Marathons and my husband Si completed 14. In addition to them, we have won many races such as 5K and 10K's but only because there were very few people left in our age group to complete them!! If you possible can run or walk any, please do so : I can assure you that they will be an experience that you will never forget !!!!!! May God bless all of you now and throughout eternity,
Suzanne Sorrell Silbertasch

Monday, April 13, 2009

Sr. Alexis


This photo was taken on Sister's 80th birthday, November 19, 2007
I don't think she's changed a bit !!

Monday, March 30, 2009

Patsy Golob Decker


In the fall of 1959 I attended Valley College. This experience lasted only a year and a half due to a tonsillectomy. I left school sans tonsils, but with a fiancĂ©, Fred. I then worked for a title insurance company, and we were married in February 1962. We moved to San Diego where Fred was working and daughter Kathleen was born the following December. In January 1963 we moved to Burbank when Fred began working for Lockheed. In June of that year he was transferred to the U. S. Navy base at Moffett Field south of San Francisco. In December it was on to Jacksonville, Florida for a year then back home to Sherman Oaks for daughter Molly’s birth in January 1965. When she was two weeks old, Fred received more traveling papers, this time to South East Asia. I was a single mom for 8 months until he returned home.
We bought our first home in late 1965 in Granada Hills. Our daughter Michelle was born in April 1966, and we made a vow to stay put. Our son Andy was born in May 1969 and I was happy to be a stay-at-home mom. During this time I belonged to a guild that supported Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. Fred and I were blessed with active, healthy children and I wanted to contribute by helping others.
In June of 1977 Lockheed had us “on the road again” and this time to Montreal, Canada for three years. So much for a vow to stay put. ”Itchy feet” struck again and in 1980 we were transferred to Derbyshire, England for a two year stay. During our stay we were able to travel extensively in Europe. Our experiences in both Canada and England were very rewarding for the six of us.
We returned home to live in Ventura, CA with interesting accents and a desire to embrace all things American.
With our daughters in various colleges and our son preparing for the same, I decided to back-up my enthusiasm for higher education by enrolling in UCSB, graduating in 1989 with a BA in English. (Ironic it has taken me this long to write this Blog!)
I helped Fred with a book he was writing about his Great-Great Grandfather’s regiment during the Civil War. We were thrilled when “Yates Phalanx” was published in 1994.
Fred took early retirement from Lockheed in 1995 after 33 years. After a short period of being “at leisure” he went to work for a small aerospace company in Fullerton.
By this time the drive from Ventura was too much and we moved to Glendale. In 2003 we bought a townhouse in Monrovia where we again “vowed to stay put!”
We are blessed with happily married children with wonderful spouses and 8 terrific grandchildren. I guess our daughters caught our “itchy” feet and it has given us more travel time to Seattle, WA, Holland, MI and Richmond, VA. Our son decided to stay put and he and his family live in La Canada Flintridge.
Since 1998 I am back in the volunteering mode. This time with a guild that supports the USC University Hospital and the Keck School of Medicine. We raise funds for scholarships for graduating medical students. We also enjoy tailgating at USC football games (especially the past six years!)
It was wonderful to see my classmates at the Reunion and to hear about their lives and families. The PHS experience taught me to live my life to the fullest and to strive to be whatever I wanted to be.
Fred and I have watched the DVD several times and it is fabulous! It evoked many wonderful memories…and the music was great. Thank you, Devi. And thank you to the Reunion Committee for a wonderful weekend in March.
Fondly,

Patsy

POSTED BY PATSY GOLOB DECKER