A great man who’s had quite a wife
Jack Hammett was at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, while serving in
the Navy. He spent 22 years in the military before running the
Bristol Park Medical Group starting in 1960.
He became a civic leader, serving in various organizations from
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, the California Aeronautics Board
to being the mayor of the city, which he calls home.
Hammett, 84, recently spoke with the Pilot’s Luis Pena to chat
about his life and public service.
Where did you grow up? What kind of childhood did you have?
I was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio. We moved a lot during
the Depression years. We were very poor and we had different
residences. I would live with my grandparents for a while in the west
side. It was a kind of difficult situation.
What kind of childhood did you have?
I had a good childhood. They were very loving. I was an only
child. When you’re an only child, everybody takes care of you.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
[From] after retiring from the Navy in San Pedro, in 1959. Because
of my experience in the Navy as a hospital core officer, some doctors
hired me as their administrator to build a medical clinic in Costa
Mesa, which I did. I moved here in 1960 and opened the clinic in
1961.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
Raising a family of four children. They all turned out good. I was
very pleased when I was on the council and mayor of the city. I
enjoyed helping build this city.
I was fortunate enough to be part of building the city after seven
years on the planning commission and eight years on the council.
Fifteen years in civic politics while I’m running a medical center
and building it. It was a very fulfilling life for me.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I don’t think I’d redo anything. I think I’m perfectly satisfied
with what I’ve done and the way life’s turned out for me. I was at
Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7. My Mary Jo was with me at Pearl Harbor and
we’re still here together 64 years later. I really can’t think of a
thing I’d want to do different.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I’ve tried several. I was the administrator of a medical center. I
also organized the Costa Mesa police reserve program. Served as a
reserve officer for 22 years. I’m a qualified commercial helicopter
and fixed wing pilot instructor. And I have my Coast Guard master’s
[certificate] for sailing vessels and ships.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 40 years ago?
I think I’m busier now. I write. I’m writing an autobiography.
Very active with the Freedom Committee and getting information to the
schools. Lecturing, traveling around locally and then I play a lot of
golf in the desert. I have a desert home, too. In the ‘60s I was
running Bristol Park Medical Group. I was president of the Chamber of
Commerce, I was a member of the police reserve, I was a member of the
Planning Commission. I had a position and appointment in Sacramento
with the medical board examiners and I was raising four kids. My days
were usually 18 hours.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
That no one’s perfect. Everybody makes mistakes. If at first you
don’t succeed, try again. Also, I think having goals and objectives
are very important. Goals with some benchmarks along the way so you
can achieve a little bit along the line and see you pass this
benchmark and can proceed on.
What do you treasure most?
My wife, because I love her. I met her when she was 15 and I was
18. Got married when she was 16 and I was 19 and we’ve been together
ever since, with the exception of a couple of wars in between.
Everything about her. She was a great mother. She was great with the
kids. She supported me when times were tough. When I was most busy in
the political arena and everything, she had a nice little knack of
when you’re starting to think you’re pretty good, she’d say, “Jack,
take out the garbage.” Takes you back to reality. She was a staunch
supporter of me. She’s the main part of my life. When you stop to
think about it 19 and 16, when you’re 84, that’s a lot of years
together.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
That I was fair honest and firm. I’d like people to remember me as
being firm in my convictions, but fair and always ready to help
somebody. God let me be helpful to people in some way, directly or
indirectly.
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