Eunice Downing was the daughter of Roy and Bertha (Haller)
Downing. Her father Roy M. Downing was the U.S. Deputy Collector of Customs in Sandusky for 48 years. Eunice
kept a friendship book during her high school years. She was a 1929 graduate of
Sandusky High School .
The School Friendship Book was designed and illustrated by
Clara Powers Wilson and was published by the Reilly & Lee Company of Chicago in 1910. (The
1916 edition of this title sold for $1.00.) The book provided pages for
autographs and photographs.
Juanita Gilbert wrote this verse for Eunice on June
1, 1925:
When your (sic) in
love it’s hearts
When your (sic)
engaged it’s diamonds
When your (sic) married
it’s clubs
And when your (sic)
dead it’s spades.
Dorothy Lorcher wrote:
Nothing more
Nothing less
Just a friend
From S.H.S.
A certificate of proficiency from the Remington Typewriter
Company appears on page 44. Eunice could
type at a net speed of 29 words per minute for fifteen consecutive minutes.
Also included in the friendship book were programs from art shows, concerts,
and tally cards from many bridge games. Napkins, decorations, favors, and
invitations found in the book have retained their original bright colors.
Eunice’s book includes birthday cards, Christmas cards, Valentines, and graduation
cards from the late 1920’s.
Newspaper clippings from Sandusky High School sporting
events, honor roll announcements, and Sandusky social and church events allow
us to learn what was important to Eunice in her teenage years. Eunice was the
winner of a limerick contest sponsored by the Sandusky Star Journal, and she kept her letter of congratulations
from the Star Journal.
The “Kodak Snap Shots” section of the friendship book
features several photographs of Eunice and her family and friends. In the
picture below are: Ila Chaffin, Dolores Neir and Eunice Downing.
Below are snapshots from a family trip to Niagara Falls in
1925.
No comments:
Post a Comment