Longtime Newport Beach activist dies of cancer
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June Casagrande
Even as the end of her life loomed just around the corner, former
Newport Beach Mayor Ruthelyn Plummer kept looking straight ahead,
eyeing the future with the anticipation of a young woman with her
whole life yet to live.
Plummer died Thursday morning from cancer she knew would be fatal.
Yet just two weeks before she died, she was having new wallpaper put
into her home. She was 79.
“She’s been such an inspiration to everybody,” said Janie Arnold,
a longtime friend of Plummer’s who stayed close by her side until the
end.
Plummer had been in hospice care since shortly after she was
diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer. She leaves behind six
grown children, four grandchildren, five great-grandchildren and a
legacy of service to her community.
Plummer grew up in Newport Beach and was living on Newport Island
when she won a seat on the City Council in 1980 representing West
Newport and the Balboa Peninsula. At the time, developments were
cropping up in the undeveloped parts of town and city officials were
cutting deals with developers to require them to build parks and
other infrastructure. But those parks and improvements were all going
into the newer parts of town and Plummer believed older West Newport
Beach should enjoy some of the improvements, too.
Several small parks in the older parts of town now stand as a
permanent tribute to her efforts. In 12 years on the council, which
included a term as mayor from 1989 to 1990, Plummer also helped get
restrooms built on the beach in West Newport as well as bus shelters
and street improvements throughout the area.
During World War II, the 18-year-old Plummer worked as a riveter
in the McDonnell Douglas plant in Long Beach.
“She was such a cool lady who did so much for the city of Newport
Beach,” Arnold said.
Theresa Smith, Plummer’s daughter, described her mother as a
person who loved life and who was determined to live it to its
fullest right up until the end.
“She had an incredible passion for life,” Smith said.
Plummer will be laid to rest in a family plot in Hollywood
Cemetery; services will be private. In addition to Smith, Plummer is
survived by sons Lance Collins, Michael Collins, Alan Collins, David
Smith and Clay Smith and brothers Reid and Kenneth Plummer.
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