Keeping history alive
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June Casagrande
In a tiny office on top of a modest office building, a handful of
island enthusiasts are working to keep a handle on history.
The Balboa Island Museum and Historical Society is proportionate
to the community it represents: tiny in size, huge in spirit.
“What we want to do is keep the history of Balboa Island prominent
in the community and available to the community,” said Craig Page, a
board member of the society. “We want a place that can be a
repository for our history and where people can come in and see what
it was like here in the past and hopefully, 50 years from now, can
see what it was like today.”
Set up since spring in its new digs in an upstairs office space on
South Bay Front, the museum and historical society are redoubling
their efforts to see that vision come true. This month, the group
will launch its new speaker series on Oct. 14 with a talk on Balboa
Island’s yesteryear by native son Seymour Beek.
Though they’re struggling to make the monthly $1,500 rent and
actively seeking donations, the cost of admission to the speaker
event is a dead-giveaway as to where the group’s heart lies. The
price of admission to the talk is not paid in money, but in a piece
of memorabilia -- a photo, book, story, home movie about Balboa
Island’s younger days.
“Even a story about someone’s family, even in the form of a
handwritten paragraph,” Page said, would be happily accepted as a fee
for admission.
The young museum and historical society started about three years
ago with the hopes of acquiring the old Balboa Island fire station.
Unfortunately for them, it wasn’t for sale. Board members finally
found a permanent location last spring, and put on display their
small but growing collection of island memorabilia: a photograph of
local real estate notable Joanie Cooper in 1957 as an Orange Coast
College cheerleader, and a 3-year-old piloting a wooden rowboat on
the Grand Canal in 1925.
So far, the museum has dozens of books and newspaper articles and
hundreds of photographs. To help raise money and to build a spirit of
historical preservation on the island, the society has started
selling for a nominal fee historical plaques for display on homes
that predate World War II.
“There are probably 20 or 30 out there now, with more applications
coming in every day,” Page said.
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