Historical note
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Barbara Diamond
It is the past that has made the city what it is today. City
entrepreneurs were catering to tourists when cattle still grazed the
hills of Mission Viejo and points south. Well, points north too.
The first hotel was built on what is now Diamond Street in 1889. The
Laguna Art Museum is the oldest cultural institution in Orange County,
founded by the Plein Air painters who made Laguna’s reputation as an art
colony. The Laguna Playhouse is the oldest continuously operating theater
on the West Coast and has become a world class theater.
Laguna Beach is the only south county city that was not part of a
Spanish land grant. It was homesteaded, under the Timber-Culture Act of
1971.
The first inhabitants were Juaneno Indians of the Shoshone tribe,
according to Karen Wilson Turnbull, author of “Cottages and Castles of
Laguna Beach” and fourth-generation Lagunan.
According to her research, Jose Serrano built the first home in town,
an adobe on the north side of Aliso Creek.
Eugene B. Sattler was the first English-speaking settler, but he only
stayed a couple of years and the George Thurston family from Utah took
over Sattler’s claim in 1871. The Thurstons built their home on what is
now the third tee of the Ben Brown’s Aliso Creek Golf Course. Descendants
of the family still live in town.
“We are still active in the community,” said Kelly Boyd, owner of the
Marine Room. “My mother Doris lives here and my brother Randy owns the
Thurston-Boyd antiques store and an interior design business.
In the early days as now, access to Laguna was limited. In the late
1800s, the only way to get into the coastal communities was down Aliso
Canyon to South Laguna or down Laguna Canyon to Laguna Beach. The two
towns developed separately, with Nyes Place the boundary, until South
Laguna was annexed in 1987.
The Goff Family, for whom Goff Island off of Treasure Island is named,
arrived in the 1890s and homesteaded the area now being developed as the
Laguna Colony resort, and Camel Point.
An Eastern land promotion company bought the property in 1887 and
began promoting development that included a deal with Santa Fe Railroad,
which wanted to build a depot at Treasure Island. The deal fell through,
but Treasure Island continued to be one of the most controversial
neighborhoods in Laguna.
One owner wanted to build high-rise condominiums there. The resort,
under construction, divided the town, 55 percent in favor, 45 percent
opposed in a special election. Now, the cost of the public park on the
property is a hot button.
Brothers William and Nathaniel Brooks, not the clothiers, settled the
Arch Street area and homesteaded 169.24 acres around Diamond Street. They
sold out to Henry Goff, but later bought back the property.
By 1880, most of the oceanfront from Three Arch Bay to North Laguna
was taken, at an estimated cost of $1 per frontage foot. The Brooks
family are said to have tried to raffle off their lots between Thalia and
Calliope streets for $25 each, but ended up taking a paltry $10 per lot.
George Rogers or relatives homesteaded most of downtown and built his
home where City Hall stands and planted the pepper tree that still grows
in front of it.
Artist Norman St. Clair arrived in Laguna Beach by stagecoach in 1900.
Smitten with the light, St. Clair sketched and painted. Exhibitions of
his work brought other artists to town. And in 1918, artist Edgar Payne
organized the Laguna Beach Art Assn. The Art Institute of Southern
California, three art festivals, the Pageant of the Masters and numerous
art galleries perpetuate the city’s reputation as an art colony. Arts
Orange validated the reputation April 19 by naming Laguna Beach the arts
patron of the year. Arts and business flourished side by side.
DIVERSITY, INDIVIDUALITY ENCOURAGED
The city was incorporated in 1927, its name officially adopted in
1904. Laguna has the only natural lakes in Orange County and the only
municipal bus service. It was the first city in the county to create a
municipal HIV Advisory Board. Robert Gentry was the first openly gay man
elected to public office in the county.
Residents consider themselves on the cutting edge of social issues.
They bought the city’s “Window to the Sea” at Main Beach in the 1970s, to
prevent the construction of wall-to-wall hotels that would block public
views of the Pacific Ocean, limited building heights throughout town and
fought tract house development by buying the property.
City officials chase away chain stores to foster one-of-a-kind
businesses that preserve the unique character of the city’s downtown,
Laguna’s undefined but cherished “village atmosphere.”
And if there is a cause, there is a group in Laguna to support it:
from lawn bowling to shelter for the homeless, who share in a potluck
Thanksgiving dinner at Bluebird Park with residents and sleep in city
churches on cold, wet winter nights. The average-priced Laguna Beach home
sold for $850,000-$900,000 in April, according to Rick Jenkins, manager
of the Laguna Beach Coldwell Banker office.
Residents say it is not just the spectacular topography or artistic
and cultural advantages or wealth that makes Laguna so special. It is the
people.
“Truly, it is the unconventional people that make the city unique,”
said Mayor Wayne Baglin. “Our residents think outside the box, some of
them don’t even know where the box is.”
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