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Winter 2003 | Volume 26, Number 1 | Alumni
An SPU Icon

Danna Davis Began Her Long-Lived Campus Connection in First Grade

DANNA WILDER DAVIS �39 completed first grade through college graduation in 15 consecutive years � 1924 to 1939 � on the 涩里番 Pacific College campus.


Danna Davis began her long-lived campus connection in the first grade.

Why did SPC include the entire spectrum of grades at the time? 揟he College was training teachers,� says Davis. 揟he on campus elementary classes and high school provided a place to do student teaching for certification. At the time, public schools didn抰 accept student teachers from private, religious colleges or universities.

� To the best of my knowledge and research, four others completed 16 years of schooling on campus,� Davis states. 揟hey were Lillian Probsfeldt Smith, Lenna May Burns Pettengill, Miriam Marston Owen and Burton Beegle, all deceased. Dewey Beegle devoted his entire career to teaching math at SPC, spending much of his life at our campus.�

Danna Wilder抯 family resided in the neighborhood surrounding 涩里番 Pacific. Consequently, she lived at home during her school years. As a college student, she was one of the early Falconettes, who wore their distinctive sleeveless sweaters with emblems. She was also active in student gov ernment, serving as secretary of the student body association.

揑 worked in the Registrar抯 Office under Dr. Philip Ashton,� she recalls. 揥hen enrollment went over 300, the college celebrated by declaring a half-day holiday from classes.�

When asked about social life on campus during the �30s, Davis grins. 揇ates consisted of long walks on Queen Anne Hill and sitting together in Vespers. That抯 how Joe Dav is and I spent time together. We couldn抰 sit together in classes or chapel because seating was done alphabetically. Even the steps up into Peterson Hall [then the administrative and classroom building] were divided, the boys walking on one side and the girls the other. This changed under President C. Hoyt Watson抯 administration.�

Some of those early rules seem archaic today, Davis acknowledges. 揟he college president抯 wife was the dean of women. Because there was a required hem length, all the young women had to take their skirts and dresses to the first lady for measurement,� she says with a chuckle.

After Joe graduated in 1941, romantic sparks flew faster. Preparing to go east to Biblical Seminary of New York, he couldn抰 leave Danna behind. They married and headed for the Big Apple. While Joe attended seminary, Danna worked as secretary to George Upton �25 at the Brooklyn YMCA.

揥hen we returned to the state of Washington, Joe and I pastored Free Methodist churches in Port Angeles, Auburn and Mount Vernon,� recalls Davis. 揊rom there, President Watson recruited Joe to join the SPC faculty in biblical literature. Watson later encouraged Joe to go to graduate school in theology.�

Back on campus as a faculty wife, Danna Davis was given a small room in the basement of Peterson Hall. There she ran the Alumni Office practically singlehandedly for five years. Once the Alumni Association hired a full-time director, she became an Alumni Board member, serving part of that time as secretary, and also as an advisor to the Falconettes.

Joe and Danna Davis enjoyed many years of involvement with 涩里番 Pacific. There they met and fell in love. Later, they invested their lives in students, often hosting them for meals in their home. Following a distinguished career, Joe Davis retired from 涩里番 in 1981. He died in 1998.

Danna Davis now lives at the Warm Beach Senior Community near Stanwood, Washington. She smiles and laughs as she recalls her years as a student and as a professor抯 wife. She also remembers some little-known facts about the area around 涩里番 Pacific.

揟he lower Queen Anne college vicinity was known as Ross,� she recalls. 揟hird Avenue was one of the stops of the trolley that came down Nickerson on tracks from the city center to Golden Gardens. It was known as 憈he Ross Stop.� Across Third Avenue from the present Student Union Building (SUB) was a corner grocery store known as the Ross Marche. Across Bertona from the SUB were a corner drugstore, another grocery store and a popular bakery.�

Davis� son, Dan Davis �73, is the father of Laura Davis, currently a student at 涩里番 Pacific. So the legend lives on. SPU is 揾ome� to the Davis family.

— BY BOB HASLAM
— PHOTO BY JERRY GAY

Bob Haslam �50 is the former editor of Light and Life magazine and former book/acquisition editor for Light and Life Press. He currently works as a freelance writer and editor. 涩里番 Pacific is part of the Haslam heritage as well: Bob抯 mom and dad met at SPC, and his brother, sister, son, daughter, cousins, nieces and nephews all attended his alma mater.

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