Not so ancient history
- Share via
Young Chang
Pamela Hallan-Gibson can rattle off who’s who in Orange County,
both from today and the more obscure yesterday.
The author’s favorite character in the history of this area is a
San Juan Capistrano woman from the late 1800s named Modesta Avila,
the first convicted felon. She was arrested and convicted for
obstructing a train with a line of laundry strung up across the
tracks. She was sentenced to San Quentin State Prison, where she
died.
Hallan-Gibson’s just-published “Orange County -- The Golden
Promise,” a second edition with revisions from its 1989 predecessor,
offers such fun, anecdotal touches as well as a broad and
approachable look at the county’s history from 1769 to present day.
The retired city manager of Sonoma, in Northern California, spoke
at the Orange County Fair on Saturday. She says her favorite story
from Newport-Mesa involves actress Helena Modjeska, who was Polish
and moved to Orange County in the late 1800s. She began acting to
make money. She later lived in Newport Beach, on Bay Island.
“She was just a famous person who happened to live on Bay Island,”
said Hallan-Gibson, who worked, at one time, as a journalist for what
was then called the Orange Coast Daily Pilot.
Another little factoid from the book that might surprise
Newport-Mesans, not to mention the many fair-goers nowadays, is that
there used to be a town named Fairview in Costa Mesa. It was wiped
out after a 1918 earthquake cut off the water flow from hot springs
located where the fairgrounds are today.
“The Fairview Hot Springs disappeared as did the town for which it
was named,” the 58-year-old writer said.
Hallan-Gibson wrote the first edition of her book for the Orange
County Centennial more than a decade ago. She had majored in history
at UC Riverside, and had always been curious about how things were
way back when. But even more than a natural inquisitiveness, the
author first started her historical foraging because it reminded her
of something close to home.
“I was born and raised in San Juan Capistrano and I literally grew
up in the shadow of the missions. My playground when I was a child
was the mission ground. I just fell in love with the place. It
comforted me when I was sad and it cheered me up when I needed
cheering up,” said Hallan-Gibson, who has also written three other
books just about her hometown.
It followed naturally that the author would investigate her
favorite place and learn how the South County city came to be. As a
Pilot staffer, she wrote many a history feature on other county
cities too. She eventually also wrote two county-related books -- “A
Century of Service: A History of the Orange County Sheriff’s
Department” and “The Bench and the Bar: A Centennial View of Orange
County Legal History.”
Her ties to home led her into politics, as she has served as
assistant to the city manager in San Juan Capistrano and city manager
in La Palma.
The writer’s historical involvement has always been broad. Her
credentials include serving on the Orange County Historical
Commission, the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society and other
commitments throughout the county.
“I remember a wonderful quote by [John] Steinbeck: ‘How do we know
who we are without our past?’” Hallan-Gibson said. “To me, the only
way [people] are going to be interested in preserving their past is
if they have something broad and general to read and pictures to look
at that’s going to make it interesting.”
Don Dobmeier, a member of the Orange County Historical Commission
based at the Old Orange County Courthouse in Santa Ana, calls
Hallan-Gibson’s work a “coffee table book.”
There are two kinds of histories, the historian said. The
scholarly kind, with a lot of gray and small-font footnotes, and the
coffee-table kind, which has interesting sidebars of trivia and tons
of large, vintage photos. Such a book also has an inviting glossiness
to everything, from its approach to its presentation, that makes it
casually open-able.
Which then makes a historical work more widely read.
“It acquaints people who have a casual interest in local history
with what was here before they arrived,” Dobmeier said.
Hallan-Gibson starts with the Franciscan friars who started
Mission San Juan Capistrano, acquaints her readers with the rancheros
who followed, the pioneer American settlers and later the immigrants
from Germany who cultivated vineyards near where Disneyland prospers
today.
She writes about oilmen in Brea Canyon, about the county during
Prohibition, about depressions and railroads and historical
Newport-Mesa celebrities like James Irvine.
In her new second edition, she fills in the holes between 1989 and
today. The fillers include histories on the El Toro Airport
controversy, the county bankruptcy and small revisions having to do
with buildings that stood 10 years ago but don’t anymore.
“I think the most important thing the second edition does is help
people understand fairly clearly the issues and the facts and the
drama surrounding the Orange County bankruptcy,” said the writer, who
lives in Sonoma Valley. “People hear about it and they scratch their
heads and think, ‘how could that happen?’ I tried very hard to
explain it as simply as I could.”
Hallan-Gibson compares her work to placing a magnifying glass on
different areas of the county.
She always gets a kick out of discovering a hill or two that
existed hundreds of years ago and still does today.
“I think it provides context and maybe continuity for those people
that are new or even those that aren’t new or have a sense of place,”
she said.
Dobmeier added that histories like Hallan-Gibson’s not only serve
the past, but the future.
“It gives you a little more insight as to how things should be,”
he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.