Mr. Smith goes to Costa Mesa City Hall
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Young Chang
With election fever running high, I thought it would be
interesting to write about a Costa Mesa councilperson who wasn’t
elected, who was sort of just chosen by the rest of the council
members and asked to join.
John Smith, a Pennsylvania native who moved to California in 1940,
was visited by two council members in 1956 and asked to fill an
unexpected vacancy. He had shown how active he was in various
community aspects of the city and had impressed council members with
his service-oriented ways.
“The council went out and wanted him,” said Bob Wilson, former
mayor of the city and historian. “He was just a civilian like you.”
The story, according to Wilson’s history “From Goat Hill to City
of the Arts: The History of Costa Mesa,” goes that Smith was happy
with the invitation. He became mayor of Costa Mesa in 1958.
Wilson’s book tells us that the late Smith, who died in 1981, was
orphaned at the age of two and learned virtues like honesty and
responsibility at an orphanage. After moving to California, he joined
the U.S. Air Force and became a cadet at the Santa Ana Army Air Base.
Smith later became a fighter pilot and served in the 459th Fighter
Squadron.
As a member of the community after all the military service, Smith
was just as active. He was a devoted member of the Costa Mesa Kiwanis
Club, of the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church and an appointed member
of the Boys’ Empire Scout Council of Orange County, according to
Wilson’s book.
He was president of the Orange County Chapter of the California
League of Cities and was “about as sweet as they come,” Wilson added.
Smith’s most prominent accomplishment as mayor was the formation of
TeWinkle Park.
“We went on record of asking our congressmen to take all this Air
Force land [and turn it] into what is now TeWinkle Park,” Wilson
said.
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a
historical LOOK BACK? Let us know. Contact Jennifer Mahal by fax at
(949) 646-4170; e-mail at [email protected]; or mail her at
c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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