ON THE WATER -- Far from run aground
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Early retirement didn’t do it for Wayne Eggleston.
A former property manager, the 55-year-old executive director of the
Newport Harbor Nautical Museum got busy when City Council members in his
hometown of San Clemente proposed turning one of the city’s historic
buildings into a restaurant a few years ago.
“At that point, I went nuts,” Eggleston said.
As a result, the avid traveler led a successful campaign to turn “Casa
Romantica” into a cultural arts center. He also raised about $3,000 and
got himself elected as a San Clemente councilman.
Having accomplished his mission at home, the nautical museum’s
trustees lured him out of his role as a volunteering retiree and
convinced him to come work for them in October 1999.
The new job fit perfectly right from the beginning, he said.
“Sometimes you come into a situation where you instantly feel at
home,” Eggleston said, adding that he considered his current position as
his “fun job.”
“The trustees are like friends,” he said. “They’re so supportive of
things that go on here and put in volunteer hours. It’s just amazing.”
Apart from nice bosses, other perks also come with the job.
“I have to look at this every day,” Eggleston said, sitting down in
his narrow office on the second deck of the steam boat, where the museum
has been since 1995. From his desk, Eggleston looks out across Newport
Harbor through windows that cover the entire length of the room.
“Isn’t that awful?” he said and smiled.
Originally from Ohio -- “I grew up on a chicken farm, and I still eat
chicken, believe it or not,” he said -- Eggleston came to California and
hasn’t left.
Years ago, his old company wanted to move him back to his native
state.
“For a promotion,” Eggleston said and rolled his eyes, making it clear
that no job in the world could force him away from the Pacific Ocean.
At the museum, which has an annual budget of about $500,000 and
doesn’t charge admission, Eggleston’s got enough on his plate to keep him
by the water for a while to come.
He’s planning to expand exhibitions in the boat’s grand salon from
three to four per year. The current Rex Brandt show remains up through
February. Coming exhibits include one on the Channel Islands in March and
a submarine exhibit that’s planned for the summer.
Eggleston also hopes to remodel the museum’s Newport gallery on the
first deck.
“We need to get the exhibit down there more up-to-date,” he said.
“More interactive.”
In July, the museum will sponsor an 18-day trip to Scandinavia and St.
Petersburg, Russia. Will Eggleston join the group?
“Of course,” came his answer. “Are you kidding?”
FYI
The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum is open from 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is free. Information: (949) 673-7863.
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