| GENERAL INFORMATION
Barbara Comstock Morse
Elementary School
7000 Cranleigh Ave.
Sacramento, CA 95823
Voice: (916) 688-8586
Fax: (916) 682-5098
ADMINISTRATION:
Principal - Kilolo Umi
Vice Principal - Rafael Martinez
FRONT OFFICE:
Secretary - Stacey Campbell-Skipper
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DIRECTIONS
TO THE SCHOOL
Barbara
Comstock Morse
is located on the corner of Dartford and Cranleigh.
If you
would like to visit the campus and are coming from 99 exit
on Sheldon Road, turn right on Bruceville
Road, left
on
Jacinto
Avenue,
right
on
Dartford Drive. The school is located on the corner of
Dartford and Cranleigh.
If you
are coming from Interstate 5 take the Laguna Blvd. exit
and make a left on Bruceville Road, left
on
Jacinto
Avenue,
right
on
Dartford Drive. The school is located on the corner of
Dartford and Cranleigh.
For more detailed directions, go to MAPQUEST.
Barbara
Comstock Morse was Elk Grove Unified School District's first
school with a student uniform policy.
Parents
signed contracts, students learned Spanish, and were also
given the opportunity to learn in accelerated classes.
SCHOOL HISTORY
Who
is Barbara Comstock Morse?
Barbara
Comstock Morse was born in Palermo, Butte County, California
on November 20, 1891. She had one sister and three brothers.
The family moved to Sacramento where she grew up and
attended school. She graduated from the ninth grade
and then went to work. She worked in Libbys Cannery
when most everything was done by hand. She later worked
in a candy store and a bakery where she rode her bicycle
to work.
On
February 3, 1918 she married Archie Morse who owned
a farm on Bruceville Road. She had five children, four
boys and one girl. When it was time for her children
to attend Carroll Elementary School located on Bruceville
and Lambert Roads, she became a trustee. |
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Because the school building was an old one-room school without
plumbing, she was instrumental in the building of a new two-room
school with modern conveniences.
As
Clerk of the Board of Trustees she was chiefly responsible
for hiring teachers and other employees, for seeing that
the school was properly maintained and for making contacts
with
the County Superintendent of Schools Office.
In
1932, in the depth of the depression, her husband died,
and
she had a 1,100 acre farm to run and five young children
to raise, so she no longer has as much time to devote
to being
a school trustee. She gave up the job after nine years of
service but continued to be interested in education. She
was
proud of the fact that two of her children became teachers
and that all of them loved to read and became well informed,
as she was. She supported her children in all their activities
with real interest and delighted in her grandchildren.
She
taught her children the value of hard work, education, community
involvement, citizenship and ethical living. She was a prime
educator in her family by example and by her commitment to
the principles upon which this country was established.
©2009
Barbara Comstock Morse Elementary School |