Laura Settle: Founder of CA Retired Teachers Association

Laura SettleIn US history, there are many examples of hardworking educators who continue to work towards improving the lives others, even after retirement. One of these is activist Laura E. Settle, the founder and first president of the California Retired Teachers Association.

Laura retired as a teacher from the Pasadena School District in Pasadena, California, while the country was struggling through the Great Depression. At that time, a retired schoolteacher received just $500 a year in pension benefits. To rectify this, a small group of teachers led by Laura Settle banded together to fight for better retirement incomes for their colleagues who were living in poverty after a lifetime of teaching.

In 1927, Laura contacted Los Angeles politicians with the goal of forming a local retired teachers’ group. Interested individuals held their first meeting  in Sycamore Grove Park. Laura was elected president, and she immediately launched into her work to expand the organization in other California communities. For years, she drove the dusty highways all over the state to help organize teachers in their common cause. All were welcome to join for the annual dues of $1.

After several years, CalRTA made its first major breakthrough in 1934, when pensions were finally boosted, and by 1943, Laura’s work had resulted in the formation of 17 divisions throughout California. Today, CalRTA is one of the nation’s largest retired teacher organizations with more than 43,000 members in 86 local divisions throughout the state.

In all, Laura served 16 years as the president of CalRTA, from 1929 to 1945. This amazing educator passed away on May 11, 1951. To honor her, a scholarship has been established in her name, and is given to deserving high school students who have declared an intention to go into the teaching profession.

Laura E. Settle: All teachers, whether currently retired or still in the classroom, owe her a great debt.

Karl Kimmons taught 22 years after retiring from the US Navy

Retired from the US Navy after 30 years of service, Karl Kimmons went on to teach high school for 22 years. Photo credit: Legacy.com.

Many dedicated educators served in the US military prior to their service in the classroom. One of these was Karl Kimmons, a high school social studies teacher who had already retired from the United States Navy.

Karl was born in Hamilton, Ohio, on April 10, 1920, the great-grandson of a Mississippi slave and a slave owner. Karl was raised in a poor family in an integrated neighborhood just a short distance from segregated Kentucky.

In 1940, Karl enlisted in the US Navy, where he served during World War II, the Korean Conflict, and the Viet Nam War. When he entered the service, the military was segregated. He was the first person who enlisted as a mess attendant, and then served in every enlisted pay grade and ended his career as a commissioned officer. When he retired from the Navy in 1970, he had attained the rank of full lieutenant and had earned numerous awards and medals. In all, his career in the military spanned 30 years.

Once he retired from the Navy, Karl attended Connecticut College where he earned a Bachelor’s degree, magnum cum laude. He was 53 years old at the time! Then he earned his Master’s degree from the University of Connecticut, and his teaching credential from Southern Connecticut State University.

Once he completed his education, Karl accepted a position as a social studies teacher in Waterford Public Schools, where he taught at Waterford Junior High snd Waterford High School for 22 years. “I was a tough teacher too, I guess because of my military back- ground,” Karl once remarked. “In study halls I told them ‘Either study or fake it!’ But many of my old students thank me now and say I really taught them how to study,” he remembered.

This Chalkboard Hero passed away on August 4, 2016, at the age of 96. He was interred at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.

Georgia teachers Sean and Heidi Hammond succumb to Covid-19

Elementary school teacher Heidi Hammond (left) and her husband, Sean Hammond, a teacher at Hammond Creek Middle School (right), have both succumbed to Covid-19. The deaths leave their son, Marshall, age 12 (center), to be raised by grandparents. Photo credit: Daily Citizen News.

 

Two beloved educators from Dalton, Georgia, have succumbed to Covid-19. Heidi Hammond, a teacher at Chatsworth Elementary School, passed away in September, just 25 days after her husband, Sean Hammond, who was due to begin his first year as a teacher and football coach at Hammond Creek Middle School. Heidi passed away on Sept. 24, 2021, at the age of 44. Sean passed away on Aug. 30, 2021, at the age of 51. The deaths leave their son, Marshall, age 12, to be raised by grandparents.

Heidi was born on August 21, 1977. In a career that spanned more than 20 years, she was teaching first grade at Chatsworth Elementary at the time of her passing. Sean was born on March 3, 1970. The couple met when they were attending college at Marshall University in West Virginia. They lived in northern Georgia’s Murray County for about 20 years after their graduation.

Sean was a seasoned veteran in the classroom. Because of the low pay, he had left teaching for a period of time to work in the coal mines. However, recently he was lured back to the classroom. He was set to begin his first year at Hammond Creek Middle School. He would have taught special education mathematics and coached football.

Previously, Sean coached a youth program, and occasionally substituted on his son’s team at Hammond Middle when the regular coaches were absent. While substituting, Sean caught the attention of George Woods IV, Head Football Coach at the school. “He was able to step right in and really coach, and I was like, wow, this guy’s really good,” remembered Woods. “So I did some homework on him and found out that he’s just a really humble guy, and he probably had as much or more coaching experience as I have,” Woods continued. When the brand new middle school coaching staff was formed, Woods convinced Sean to join the team.

Dalton Public Schools spokeswoman Pat Holloway said that Sean attended the induction for new teachers prior to the beginning of the school year and the first three days of inservice before he tested positive for Covid-19. Because of his diagnosis, Holloway reported, Sean was unable to start the school year with students in the classroom. However, he had worked with the football players during the summer and, Holloway asserted, he “had already left an indelible mark on the other coaches and players.

To learn more about these two teachers, see this article published by the Daily Citizen News.

Retired teacher Elsa Salazar Cade of Texas has garnered many awards

Retired elementary school teacher Elsa Salazar Cade of Texas has garnered many awards for her professional and volunteer work. Photo credit: Washington University in St. Louis.

Many fine teachers have earned recognition for their work in the classroom. One of these is Elsa Salazar Cade, a Mexican American educator and entomologist from Texas. She has garnered numerous awards for her work and for her philanthropic efforts.
Elsa was born in 1952 and raised in Texas. After earning her Bachelor’s degree in Science Education from the University of Texas, Austin, she was employed for two years as a fourth grade teacher, and then for two years as a reading and remedial math teacher. When she completed her Master’s degree in Public School Administration from Niagara University, she continued her career as a junior high school science educator in the public school system in Buffalo, New York.
Elsa, who has been named one of the ten best science teachers in the United States by the National Science Teachers Association, is credited for developing an award-winning interactive science curriculum. She has also served on the staff of the Buffalo Research Institute on Teaching for Education.
As strong supporters of education and youth, the Cades established the Bill and Elsa Salazar Cade Scholarship in Evolutionary Biology at the University of Lethbridge, the endowment of which has reached nearly $130,000. They have both contributed to countless student fundraisers and have volunteered their time with many local organizations, including the Lethbridge Youth Foundation, Alberta Science Foundation, and the Lethbridge United Way. In recognition of her long-standing service to the community, Elsa garnered the Senate Volunteer Award from  University of Lethbridge in 2010.
In addition, Elsa previously served on the Board of Science Alberta, a nonprofit committed to science education and awareness. For many years, she was also a member of the Fifth on Fifth Youth Foundation. As if all her work in the field of education were not enough, Elsa and her husband, Dr. Bill Cade, were also honored for their humanitarian efforts, raising money to provide shelter and life-saving equipment to benefit Haitian disaster survivors. The couple also earned a Generosity of Spirit Award from the Association of Fundraising Professionals in Calgary at a National Philanthropy Day in November, 2010.
Elsa Salazar Cade and her husband are retired and live in Texas.