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Home Education

Generous Grossmont alumni duo leave their mark

Connie & Lynn Baer by Connie & Lynn Baer
September 28, 2018
in Education, Features, La Mesa Courier
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Generous Grossmont alumni duo leave their mark

By Connie Baer and Lynn Baer | Foothiller Footsteps

Since 1921, with the graduation of its first senior class, Grossmont High School alumni have returned to their school to show their gratitude. Today, we have two generous alumni leaving their footprints on Grossmont’s physical campus: Gene Chubb, Class of 1948, and Bill Woolman, Class of 1962.

 Campus monument

In 2012, Woolman funded the creation of a two-sided, gray-columned monument in front of the 2013 Humanities Building on the east side of campus. Woolman’s vision was for a sign that celebrated Grossmont High. The sign’s front side proudly proclaims, “Grossmont High School, Established 1920.” The back side affirms, “Foothillers Forever.” The style of the monument echoes the original gray “castle” seen across the lower and uppers quads. For five years, it has been a favored spot for photographs on campus.

Generous Grossmont alumni duo leave their mark
(l to r) Bill Woolman and Gene Chubb stand by the front monument they donated to Grossmont High School. (Courtesy GHS Museum)

 

Big G on the Hill

Woolman and Chubb’s first project together was the restoration of the Big G on the Hill below the original school, which has been in that location since the 1940s when it was first made of blue and gold blooming shrubs planted by the Hi-Y Club, of which, not surprisingly, Chubb was a member. Then, in 1993, thanks to Chubb’s generosity as co-owner of RCP Brick and Block, the big “G” we now see on the hill in front of the original granite “castle” was created from 770 gold painted bricks and gravel by crews of parents and band members over nine Saturdays.

In 2016, the big “G” was again showing its age and was renovated this time due to the generosity of both Chubb and Woolman.

With Chubb donating the materials and Woolman funding the installation, the “G” was repaired and painted, the frame of the “G” redone in stone to match the 1922 granite of the original school, and the gravel replenished! The Big G on the Hill is now a beautiful symbol of the original granite school visible above it.

Class of 1989 sign

Located at the front of the school near the senior lawn is a sign donated 30 years ago by a senior class. In 2016, it was also showing its age with its red brick pillars and the illegibility of the face of the sign. Again, Chubb came to the rescue by donating the concrete block and materials as well as the mason’s labor to renovate the pillars and the face of the sign. The historic face of the sign, lettering, and image of our mascot “Grossmont Gus” were also replaced thanks to a generous donation to the GHS Educational Foundation from the Gerald Fackler Charitable Remainder Trust.

Paver Path

Most students and staff on campus tolerated the muddy shoes and footprints caused by a pathway adjacent to the Math Building that flooded during irrigation or rain. However, in 2017, looking for another project, Woolman and Chubb again joined forces to create a pathway out of gray pavers and gravel, with Chubb donating the materials and Woolman funding the labor for a landscaper to create the pathway, much to the delight of the teachers and students in the Math Building.

Front monument

The most recent project of these two wonderful Foothillers is the beautiful and striking front monument, which is adjacent to the school’s 2016 two-story office. As usual, Chubb donated the materials and the labor of the mason while Woolman funded the letters, the two bronze plaques, and their installation. The sign beautifully complements the school office in style, but echoes the historic nature of the rear monument, with the substitution of a favorite Foothiller student proclamation, “It’s Great to Be Young and a Foothiller.”

Generous Grossmont alumni duo leave their markAs Principal Dan Barnes told Woolman and Chubb, “These kinds of projects help keep our community proud of our school, staff, and students. These kinds of things would never get done if it weren’t for your efforts and care of Grossmont High School.”

The generosity of Chubb and Woolman is never-ending. Not surprisingly, once the front monument was completed, Chubb asked, “What’s our next project?”

Visit the GHS Museum on Wednesdays: noon-3:30 p.m. Oct. 3 or Saturday, Oct. 27 from 10 a.m.-noon or by appointment on other Wednesdays. To learn more about Foothiller history, visit foothillermuseum.com, email [email protected] or call 619-668-6140.

—Connie and Lynn Baer write on behalf of the Grossmont High School Museum.

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