A parade of life experiences
Terry Chambers walked quickly around the Sherman Library & Gardens in
Corona del Mar, showing off -- for what had to be the umpteenth time
-- the hundreds of begonias and ferns heād pruned and planted over
the years.
āI mustāve remodeled every flower bed in this place twice,ā the
30-year volunteer from Newport Beach said.
Chambers, 83, proceeded to the museum, bounded down the stairs and
brushed briskly past the library shelves that house books on local
history and seafaring vessels -- books heād probably sorted over and
over again. His agility belies the fact that his vision has
deteriorated in recent years.
āThese books are great for when people want to research, but I
donāt do any research myself,ā he said. āIām legally blind in both
eyes.ā
When you stop to think about just how many dark, memorized miles
heās walked there, how much unsubsidized work the man put into
maintaining the gardenās beauty, and how many hours heās put in, you
realize that Chambers commands a presidential respect.
Surely his ear for detail, his million-dollar smile and his
pristine enunciation are qualities he had picked up from working
extensively with his old boss, former President Reagan. Chambers said
the two were close during the former California governorās rise to
the presidency, and he even coordinated Reaganās inaugural parade.
The Daily Pilotās Jeff Benson toured the gardens with Chambers to
talk about volunteerism and his political career.
Can you tell me a little bit about the volunteer efforts going on
at Sherman Library & Gardens?
Volunteerism is so important to be able to sustain a garden like
this. They couldnāt afford to do it with paid labor.
In about 1997, we established a volunteer program, but theyāve
been hiring volunteers for a long time. By coincidence, my mother was
our first volunteer. When she retired, I kind of inherited it. But we
always need more people with sustained interest in this, and we need
people who can come in faithfully at 10 a.m. every Tuesday or
whatever.
How did you become interested in gardening?
Iāve been a gardener for 70 some-odd years. My family lived in the
foothills of Glendora and we had 50 acres of citrus and 100 acres of
hillside. I used to climb up the hillsides and help my grandmaās
gardener. I soon got a job and I mustāve been about 7 or 8 at the
time. I got paid a dime a cup for catching snails. Ultimately, I
graduated to catching gophers and got paid more. Dad found out that
some of the gopher tails I had were kind of stiff. He was mad because
I was recycling gopher tails.
When the stock market crashed, I was doing some marketing work
after high school. But then I worked up a full-time job doing
gardening for big estates and got another job at Pomona College [in
Claremont] mounting botany flowers.
How has this job worked out for you?
Iāve been here since 1970 and only one volunteer has been here
longer -- Joan Carter, the current president of the Volunteer Assn.
Iād always tell people when they start here, āIf you consider
yourself a real volunteer, hold up your hand.ā Then Iād leave some
people at the gate. So you can see why they got rid of me.
You were fired?
No, Iām only kidding.
What did you do for a living before you came to the Gardens?
After I got out of the Navy, I did some volunteer work for the
Tournament of Roses. I helped put the parade on.
When ABC said they wanted to start covering the parade on
television, I helped with that and got interested in the timing of
the parade. Soon, I was well recognized in assisting with the timing
of televised parades.
When Nixon was elected president, the administration asked the
Tournament of Roses to see if they could send someone over to do the
inaugural parade -- Jan. 20, 1973. It was fun, but I said I never
wanted to be invited to Washington, D.C. again.
What happened then?
Five months later, I started working for Reagan in Sacramento.
They solicited me to work in his sub-cabinet with the Secretary of
Business and Transportation.
Then I volunteered to do Reaganās inaugural parade. He only had
one. The challenge of inaugural parades is that they never start on
time, since the president is the guest of Congress. They asked me to
put together a one-hour parade for TV, when parades are usually four
to five hours long. But it was live, right in front of the White
House, and it went off without a hitch.
Iām sure youāve got some great stories to share from all those
presidential parades.
The thing is, those parades were all volunteer too. I did another
parade where [Dwight] Eisenhower was the grand marshal, and as a
volunteer, I had to put on a big reception for him. It turned out to
be a rainy day, and when I took Eisenhower through the crowd to
introduce him to people, one of his aides came up and said,
āChambers, donāt handle the merchandise.ā
Iāve met such marvelous people by volunteering, and my job in
Washington got me very involved in it.
How did your volunteerism in parades and politics contribute to
what youāve become today here at the gardens?
We get busloads of people coming in here and I always tell people
Iām āVolunteer Emeritus.ā The value of being a āVolunteer Emeritusā
is that you can give all kinds of advice and then come back to
complain that people didnāt take it.
Our volunteers give labor on their hands and knees. But I feel the
best volunteers are all [backsides] and elbows.
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