The first school in Manteca per se was Yosemite School.
It was also Manteca’s first two-story school building — and the last until the Measure A bond funded 49-repalcement classroom and media center was completed last summer at East Union High.
Students in the Manteca townsite attended East Union School to the west.
In 1910, Manteca had 80 residents. But by 1912 East Union was overcrowded as Manteca was growing.
Townsite residents — six years before Manteca was incorporated as a city — approved a $1,200 special tax in July of 1912 to fund a new school.
Classes started on Sept. 9, 1912 with 30 students attending the new school on the second floor of the Board of Trade building in the 200 block of West Yosemite secured as rental space by school trustees Ed Powers, Fred Norcross, and E.E. Salmon.
Residents almost immediately started debating about whether a free standing school should be built.
In 1913 as an election for a $17,000 bond to build a school was approaching, the East Union School burned down.
Voters approved the bond.
Three acres were bought from J.J. Overshiner for $1,500 along West Yosemite Avenue. Construction then started on the original two-story, 10-room brick Yosemite School.
The barn and restroom building from East Union was moved into place behind the new school opened for classes on Dec. 1, 1914.
Records show J.M. Luck and his wife Claudia were hired to teach with the husband serving as principal. It was a job that paid $125 a month. The couple lived in the school house.
They joined the existing teaching staff, mane of which lived at the school.
The Manteca School District’s first kindergarten class opened in 1924 in a house in the 700 block of West Yosemite Avenue across from Yosemite School.
A fire on Aug. 7, 1948 destroyed the school.
School began that September with students in classes at the MRPS Hall, FESM Hall, and American Legion Hall.
By chance, Lincoln School was under construction at the time.
The current Yosemite School that now houses Manteca Online Academy was completed for $135,000 in 1950.
Other items of note about the original Yosemite School.
*It was used during the 1918-1919 flu epidemic as a makeshift hospital to care for the sick as school and other public gatherings were cancelled.
*Records show the electric bill for April of 1918 was $5.57 and was part of $461.47 in expenses that month.
To contact Dennis Wyatt, email dwyatt@mantecabulletin.com