Coffey’s vision of Costa Mesa exists today
Jennifer K Mahal
Some people have the uncanny ability to see how things might be.
George Coffey, Costa Mesa’s first city manager, was one of them. His
vision of the master plan for Costa Mesa in the early 1950s is very
close to how the city looks today.
Born in Riverside, Coffey graduated from the University of
Southern California. He married a woman named Vera and the couple was
“inseparable,” Costa Mesa historian and former mayor Bob Wilson said.
“Where one went, the other went,” Wilson said.
Coffey was a commander in the U.S. Navy during World War II with
the Third Amphibious Group. According to Wilson’s book, “From Goat
Hill to the City of the Arts: The History of Costa Mesa,” Coffey took
part in the invasions of Lingayen Gulf and Leyte in the Philippines.
He also participated in the occupation of Japan.
He started as city manager on July 30, 1953. His salary was $8,500
per year, a far cry from the more than $12,500 current city manager
Alan Roeder makes per month.
Wilson said Coffey had done a short stint as city manager in the
city of Riverside and “we heard good things about him.”
“We were looking for any live body,” Wilson admits.
Described as a quiet man who did good work, Coffey’s biggest
contributions to Costa Mesa were his ability to hire good people --
such as Costa Mesa’s first police chief, Arthur McKenzie -- and
creating the city’s master plan.
Wilson remembers that city leaders were talking about hiring
someone to create the master plan when Coffey said, “Let me save you
some money.”
“He got a couple of pieces of paper and pencil and outlined the
city of Costa Mesa on a master plan,” Wilson said. “Believe it or
not, it’s similar to how it is today.”
Coffey was only with the city a short time before he retired, said
Wilson, and then died. By 1955, he had been replaced by Robert L.
Unger.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a
historical Look Back? Let us know. Contact Jennifer K Mahal by fax at
(949) 646-4170; e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at
c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627
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