I'll do a search tonight or tomorrow for you with a VERY useful website. IIRC it was a U of NC site. It contained some SUPER lessons on basic HTML. It was so simple I used to be able to type out a very basic web page as a word document (yes, all in HTML code!), save it as an HTML file and then load it on my browser. If you're curious as to why I suggest learning basic HTML, there's a good reason!
When I first wanted to get a web page up I didn't know a thing about it. I downloaded a TON of programs which were allegedly drop and drag or click and build. NONE functioned properly. If you just wanted a simple picture, background and cheesy text, they worked ok. Wherever problems appeared after creation, I couldn't find out why, let alone hope to fix them! I then broke down and learned just some basic HTML. It not only made it easy to use any of these programs, but it allowed me to see a really cool feature on another site, pull up the source page, find the HTML for it, modify to my needs and then add it to my page! Even with better HTML editors like Frontpage, there can be problems. If you don't know any HTML, fixing them can be a nightmare! I actually used a totally free program, AOLPress, to create my site. A then combined forces with a friend, joining our websites together. He used Frontpage to make updates. Whenever he did so it caused a minor alignment glitch in one of the button graphics, not matter which browser you used. I'd have to go in with my freebie program and fix it. We haven't done updates to the site for many years, but he did the last one. If you visit it you can see a button misaligned!
Our site has now been up for about 17 years. There's no CGI or Java, just straight HTML. We did this to allow proper function with ANY browser. The link is included below if anyone would like to see it. It was/is another topic/hobby I've been interested in since I was in my teens. We've actually provided technical assistance to Disney, been totally plagarized by a large manufacturer/importer for the historical information they provided with their products and in advertising, provided assistance to a film maker for a history DVD and approached by the Associated Press for help with a story. As far as the Disney help goes, if anyone has seen or been to California Land in Disney Land, we provided tech assistance to them for creating accurate representations of the locomotive and cars used as stores.
http://calzephyr.railfan.net/
Like I said earlier, the information on HTML is REALLY helpful. I may even have a copy still on my 'puter somewhere. I'll put it up as soon as I can find it. Good luck with your site. It can actually be fun!