All things at Ballou Junior High related to diversity and creating a
welcoming school environment for students, parents, community, and staff
SODA (School Office of Diversity Affairs)
Suzanne Cella is Ballou's SODA
(Diversity) Representative. Any issues or concerns you may have
involving diversity issues, please contact Mrs. Cella, Assistant Principal
at Ballou JH.
In addition, please feel free to contact Mrs. Cella if you have
additional questions about the Puyallup School District's commitment to
diversity. Please consider participating in the Involved
Multi-cultural Parent and community Advisory council (IMPACT). This
group meets monthly. Information about scheduled meetings can be found
on the District website www.puyallup.k12.wa.us, Office of diversity Affairs page or by calling the Office of Diversity Affairs at 253.840.8966.
History of Ballou
In
1942 Frank and Helen Ballou bought ten acres on South Hill, opposite
present-day Firgrove School. It was a stump ranch which Helen said, “We
bought for a song.” (By way of comparison, a 1941 Puyallup brochure
notes forty-one acres and a small house for sale for $11,500.) Frank
easily obtained a license to buy and use dynamite explosives, which in
those days were called “powder monkeys,” to clear his and some of his
neighbors’ land. Fire was used to burn remaining residue. These fires
were kept going with improvised air blowers—electric blowers with garden
hoses and water pipe placed in the holes by the stump roots. While
Frank was away working, Helen and the boys kept the fires going.
On
their south five acres they raised strawberries, which they took to
market on Meridian, a two-lane road at the time. Only half of the road
was paved. Meridian was right next to their front yard, and in an
interview in 2003, Helen commented that in those days it was “twenty
minutes between cars on Meridian, now it is twenty minutes to get out
onto the road.” On the rest of their land they raised hay and
raspberries, and cared for three sheds of chickens.
Frank
held many meetings in their home with local families, and, energized by
refreshments served by Helen, Firgrove Water Company was formed.
He
also helped found the Pierce County Fair which started at the Fruitland
Grange in 1947, then moved to Sumner, and eventually went to its
present site in Graham. He was the first manager. Frank, together with
Reed Hansen, county extension agent, made a tape recording of three 4H
boys in the early 1940s who were about to go to the Yakima Fair to make a
presentation of their 4H work. Gerald Ballou was one of the three boys.
The South Hill Historical Society has a copy of the tape.
Frank
was Master of Fruitland Grange and a deputy Master for the Washington
State Grange. Helen was also the Master of the Fruitland Grange for
eight years.
Actively
involved in the Firgrove School PTA, Frank served as president for a
time. His son Robert (Bob) graduated from the eighth grade at Firgrove
School in a class of two boys and five girls in 1946. Helen and Frank
voted at the school, dropping their votes in a box with a slot on top,
and enjoyed talking with Mrs. Irene Miracle, precinct chair, to catch up
on the news. In her 2003 interview, Helen referred back to those days
saying, “You didn’t dare breathe or Edna Bence (Tribune columnist) would
put it in the paper.”
Frank
held other jobs. One was helping build escort aircraft carriers at Todd
Shipyard during World War II where he worked the graveyard shift. With
two boys in his home, it was difficult to sleep in the daytime, so he
went to the unemployment office looking for a better job. He was hired
as a Farm Labor Representative to recruit workers to come to the
Puyallup Valley to harvest crops. He gave talks to schools, and with a
public address system on the top of his car, he played a recording to
recruit pickers. During this career he recruited thirty to thirty-five
thousand workers from the Tacoma area.
Frank H. Ballou died in 1964 and Helen Wilson Ballou died in 2005.
In 1971 a new junior high school, built in the Firgrove area, was named after Frank. Frank H. Ballou Junior High School is on 136th St. on South Hill.