Vitals:
Anthony Julius Thuma
Veteran
Birth: 4 Jul 1918 Bohemia, Suffolk County, New York
Death 30 May 1993 (aged 74) Wilkes County, North Carolina
Burial Our Lady Queen of Heaven Cemetery
North Lauderdale, Broward County, Florida
Yearbook remarks:
“Living in a great big way.”
Activities: Senior Orchestra, Sayville Senior, Journalism, Ping Pong, Stage Manager for Senior Play
Today we remember Anthony Thuma, a member of the Sayville High School Class of 1936. His yearbook line, “Living in a great big way,” gives his entry a confident and upbeat spirit. Anthony was involved in Senior Orchestra, Sayville Senior, Journalism, Ping Pong, and served as Stage Manager for Senior Play, reflecting a student whose contributions reached into music, publications, and school productions.
2026 graduation is fast approaching. 90 years ago in 1936, our Sayville High School graduates would have felt the unique pull between a quiet, coastal upbringing and the massive shifts occurring just a few miles west in New York City. While the island was still largely defined by its sprawling estates, and potato farms, the completion of the Grand Central Parkway just a few years prior was rapidly turning the region into the world’s first true “suburbia.”
Walking across the stage in June of 1936, a graduate wasn’t just stepping into adulthood; they were stepping into a world caught between a painful past and an uncertain future. The Great Depression had been the backdrop of their entire adolescence, and while the “New Deal” offered a glimmer of hope, the struggle for steady work was likely the first thing on every graduate’s mind. For many, the dream wasn’t a corner office, but simply a reliable paycheck and the chance to help their families finally move past the hardships of the early 30s.
Yet, despite the economic weight, the culture of 1936 was vibrant and pulsing with a new kind of energy. In their free time, these graduates were listening to the rise of Swing music; Benny Goodman was the “King of Swing,” and the upbeat, rebellious rhythm of big bands provided a much-needed escape from daily life.
They were talking about Jesse Owens, whose legendary performance at the Berlin Olympics that summer was a point of immense pride and a defiance of rising tensions in Europe. At the cinema, they might have caught Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times, a film that perfectly captured their own anxieties about a rapidly industrializing world.
As they looked toward the horizon, the news was a mix of domestic recovery and international unease. They watched as Franklin D. Roosevelt campaigned for a second term, promising continued relief, while across the Atlantic, the headlines spoke of the escalating Spanish Civil War and the growing shadow of conflict in Europe. For a 1936 graduate, life was a balancing act: finding joy in the local dance hall or a Saturday matinee, while keeping a wary eye on a world that felt like it was changing faster than ever before.