Otis M. Carrington ~ Redwood City, California
Posted by: brwhiz
N 37° 29.131 W 122° 14.244
10S E 567419 N 4149007
The auditorium at Sequoia High School in Redwood City, California is named after a well-known music teacher who taught at the High School for 43 years.
Waymark Code: WMFKAE
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 10/29/2012
Views: 1
Carrington Hall
Named in Honor of
Otis M. Carrington (1884 – 1964)
Otis M. Carrington is best remembered as one of the world’s foremost composers of operettas for children. In 1912, Mr. Carrington wrote “The Windmills of Holland”. It was the first of more than forty operettas to come from his hand, and led American music critics like Harold Rogers of the Christian Science Monitor to call him “The Leader of the Operatic Field of Educational Music”.
Mr. Carrington joined the teaching staff at Sequoia High School in 1907 as the art and music instructor, and went on to head the school’s music department he developed (with its famous choral programs, including The Treble Clef), teaching an unprecedented forty-three years.
Between 1923 and 1945 student productions of his operettas were standard fare at Sequoia High and at Redwood City elementary schools. Sequoia was the testing ground for his work. Carrington and B.E. Myers, an instructor in the Commercial Arts Department at Sequoia, published and distributed the work as Myers and Carrington, School Operettas. The success of these children’s operettas is evidenced by their over twenty five thousand presentations worldwide.
Dedicated January 30, 2004
Richard Kimball, Grand President
Native Sons of the Golden West
in conjunction with
NSGW Redwood Parlor No.66 and
Sequoia High School Alumni Association.