A heritage month in May
Barbara Diamond
Laguna Beach celebrates its heritage in May with city-sponsored
activities and traditional community events to celebrate its
distinction.
“What makes Laguna unique is the sense of place,” said Planning
Commissioner Norm Grossman, who has served on city committees for
more than two decades.
“Residents are very aware that it’s different and they want to
protect that, although they may have different ideas of what the
difference is and how to protect it.”
Laguna Beach was regarded for years by many as an enclave of
wild-eyed tree huggers. They were just ahead of their time in
espousing open space preservation long before it became politically
correct. However, Laguna has more registered Republicans than
Democrats and one of the largest community groups is the Laguna Beach
Taxpayers Association -- and John Kerry got two votes in Laguna for
every one for Bush.
“The most conservative people in town are the environmentalists,”
City Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman said. “But we are all willing to
live here in smaller and less accommodating homes that cost way more
than grander houses on our borders.”
Laguna has been unique in South County since the first settlers
arrived. Unlike surrounding communities, most of Laguna was never
part of a Spanish land grant or giant family holdings.
It was pioneered by homesteaders and business people -- who
catered to residents and visitors.
Hotels were among the first structures built in South Laguna,
which was then -- and some say still is -- a separate community, and
in what became one of the most distinguishable downtowns in Orange
County.
From early day, tourism and art have been hand-in-glove.
Laguna’s natural beauty -- the juxtaposition of ocean beaches,
hills and canyons -- brought artists to town before the turn of the
20th century and put the city on the country’s cultural map by the
1930s.
The Laguna Beach Art Association was founded in 1918 and built the sales gallery that morphed into the Laguna Art Museum, the oldest
cultural institution in Orange County.
The museum spawned the first summer Festival of Arts and its
offspring, the Sawdust Festival and Art-a-fair, and the Laguna
College of Art & Design.
Laguna Beach was incorporated in 1927, the first city in South
County. Before incorporation, the chamber of commerce pretty much ran
the town, and tourism was encouraged.
The Laguna Beach Visitors and Conference Center, which spun off
from the chamber, promotes the city as a tourist destination and its
members voluntarily fund art organizations and events that bring
visitors to town.
One of Laguna’s most successful tourist-attracting art events is
the Art Walk, held on the first Thursday of every month, when
galleries and the museum stay open late. An estimated 1,500 people
take the monthly walk in winter, 2,500 in summer. The May Art Walk
coincides with the opening celebration of Heritage Month.
The Laguna Beach Heritage Committee, created in 1990 to advise
city officials on preservation issues, organizes city-sponsored
Heritage Month activities. For more information, call senior City
Planner Nancy Csira at (949) 497-0332.
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