Hitting the century mark
Mathis Winkler
Had he been born six months earlier, Donald Leroy Bartels would have
been alive at the same time as his favorite composer, Giuseppe Verdi.
The Italian died Jan. 27, and Bartels was born July 21. The year was
1901.
“He was a great composer,” Bartels said Wednesday. “It’s hard to
imagine anybody any greater.”
Together with his only daughter, Catherine Welch, and friends, Bartels
celebrated his 100th birthday at Costa Mesa’s Silverado Senior Living
home, where he recently moved from Laguna Beach. Dorothy, Bartels’ wife
of 37 years, died in 1975.
A South Dakota native, Bartels came to Southern California with his
parents as a 2-year-old and grew up on a farm in Downey.
He was one of two students in the first graduating class from the
School of Architecture at USC in 1923.
“It seemed like a normal thing to do,” he said.
Bartels, who suffers from dementia, said he couldn’t quite remember
what kind of projects he worked on. Welch helped out a little and said
her father had designed the interior of the Robinsons-May department
store in Fashion Island and built homes in Los Angeles’ Park La Brea area
after World War II.
He also designed a bomb shelter for a Beverly Hills businessman.
“We did a lot of things for rich people,” Bartels said. “That was a
normal thing for a rich person to want.”
While struggling to remember his professional accomplishments, Bartels
began to smile when asked whether he really was a self-confessed
chocoholic.
“Chocolate? Are you kidding?” he said, adding that he prefers the
darker kind. “I don’t care for milk chocolate.”
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