Aliso Creek’s ‘Vi’ Brown dies at 85
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The grounds are beautiful, and merry golfers still gather to tee up
at the foot of the canyon bluffs, but there is a sadness in the ocean
breezes at Aliso Creek Inn and Golf Course, with the passing of
longtime owner Violet “Vi” Brown.
Brown died Sept. 18 at Hoag Memorial Hospital at the age of 85,
succumbing to an unspecified illness she had struggled with for some
time, according to her nephew, Ed Slymen.
A memorial service is planned for 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 21, on the
fairway at the course.
Friends, family and associates of Brown are invited to attend the
service.
She and her late husband, Ben, had operated the rugged 80-acre
canyon resort since the mid-1950s. She sold the property to the
Montage Resort & Spa in February 2004.
Known as a hard worker who put in seven-day weeks and 12-hour
days, Brown still visited her office at the resort every day, up to
the week before her death, Slymen said.
She also walked the length of the canyon-nestled course every day
-- a two-mile walk -- up to two weeks before her death.
Brown was born April 25, 1920, in Akron, Ohio, one of three
children. She married Ben Brown a year or two before the couple
bought the canyon property in 1957, when it consisted of only a
nine-hole golf course and a trailer that served as the office and pro
shop.
In 1963 they added the 62-unit hotel complex, naming it Laguna
Beach Country Club and Village.
In 1967, the couple built a restaurant, which they called Ben
Brown’s. At the time it was one of the only coastal dining and
entertainment spots, and it was an immediate success. The Browns
commuted to Laguna Beach from Beverly Hills until moving to the
property in 1968.
One year later, in 1969, the hotel was virtually destroyed in a
flood, but the Browns held on and rebuilt.
When her husband died in 1972, Violet Brown kept the business
running, “clawing her way back” to success, her nephew Slymen said.
She had worked as a bookkeeper for several companies but had never
managed a business on the scale of the Laguna Beach Country Club and
Village.
“She had super courage,” Slymen said. “I remember her walking in
boots through four feet of mud; the mud was so high it was up to the
doorknobs and the fairway was covered in mud.”
Brown’s approach to the business was stated on the resort’s
website, where she described the Canyon Lodge as a “mountain get-away
in the canyon by the beach. We don’t want glitz or gimmicks.”
Although an astute businesswoman, Slymen said his aunt considered
herself a “steward” of the pristine canyon property and adamantly
refused to consider developing it beyond the hotel, restaurant and
golf course, despite many offers.
She also opposed the construction of a bicycle path between the
Aliso Creek property and the adjoining Aliso/Wood Canyons Regional
Park, arguing that cyclists would be at risk from golf balls.
An animal lover, she and her husband at one time owned race
horses, and her beloved St. Bernard was the hotel mascot, Slymen
said. She also played a fair game of golf, although she worked too
hard at managing the golf course to be able to practice the sport
much.
In the 1990s, two more major floods -- one in 1992 and another in
the winter of 1997-98 -- further damaged the facility and presented
still more hurdles for the resort owner.
When the Montage Resort and Spa was built less than a quarter of a
mile away, Brown was impressed with the development -- and developers
-- and agreed to let the canyon parcel go.
“When we saw what the Montage did across the street, met the
people and saw the quality, and then they made a decent offer, she
said it was time to sell,” Slymen said.
Slymen, who had served as general manager of the resort, was also
pleased that the Montage offered a job to his son, Mark, who is the
golf course superintendent.
Brown is survived by Slymen and his children, Luke and Mark Slymen
and Laura Trautman, and a number of great-grand nieces and nephews.
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