Countdown to 2000: Politics
Alex Coolman
Even in the first decade of the century, Newport-Mesa residents were
displaying a side of themselves that would be pronounced in later years:
they were a civic-minded lot, full of opinions -- sometimes rather
cantankerous ones -- on the politics of the area.
A meeting of the Balboa Island Improvement Assn. in 1919 provides an illuminating view of the political maneuvering of the time: a member of
the “Bulkhead Committee,” which was formed to oversee the repair of the
bulkhead that protected the island, loudly proclaimed that it would be
for the best if the entire body of land sank into the bay.
The island, after all, had been “sold by a bunch of (expletive) crooks
and bought by a bunch of (expletive) fools,” this individual pointed out.
Joseph Allan Beek had a different perspective, though. He was all for
making improvements on the island and asserted that “if the association
program for improvements is carried out, [property] values will surely
increase.”
He predicted, according to the minutes of the meeting, “that the time
will come when there won’t be a lot on the island worth less than five
hundred dollars, and that front lots will some day be worth $5,000!”
The political challenges of the time had not yet morphed into the
brain-warping complexity of today’s issues, and the structure of
government was correspondingly simple. Newport Beach’s political
structure retained the same format that it started with at the
incorporation of the city in 1906, featuring a president and a board of
trustees. It would not be until the late 1920s before the city had an
official mayor.
The Harper/Fairview area, despite the financial difficulties that
afflicted it, was sprouting its own early forms of civic organization. A
women’s club, a boys’ club and a library had grown up in Harper. It
wouldn’t be long, in the early ‘20s, that the growing sense of community
identity in the region would find expression in a new town name -- Costa
Mesa.
Sources:
“A Slice of Orange: The History of Costa Mesa,” Edrick J. Miller, 1970.
“Newport Beach: The First Century, 1888-1988,” James Felton, Ed., 1988.
“Balboa Island Yarns,” Joseph Allan Beek.
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