Looking Back
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Young Chang
Newport Beach in the mid-1950s was a town of change. New residents
trickled in. People no longer gambled out in the open. World War II had
ended, and the absence of laws such as prohibition let people drink and
be merry.
But one of the most obvious changes had to do with a single person.
A single female person.
Dora Hill.
As the city’s first female mayor, Hill held the coveted seat from 1954
to 1958 and led the way for women such as Doreen Marshall and Jackie
Heather to succeed her as mayor through the following decades.
Her husband was Ned Hill, a local celebrity in his own right, who
founded Mariners Bank and was one of the founders of Ackerman Boatyard on
Lido Isle.
The couple was active about town. Donald Elder, vice mayor of the City
Council in the early ‘60s, said Dora Hill had a way of making almost
everybody like her.
“Everyone in town pretty much knew who she was. She’d been active in
all kinds of civic things,” Elder said.
Jim Stewart, a Presbyterian minister, first promoted Hill as a mayoral
candidate. During her term, Hill led the effort to have a board of
freeholders elected to form a new city charter. The charter helped to
ensure that council members were nominated from different parts of the
city, so that no one part of Newport Beach would dominate the council.
“The men weren’t used to women being mayor,” said George Grupe, a
longtime Newport Beach resident and historian. “But I think everybody
liked it because she was so popular.”
One of Hill’s commitments was with the Newport Beach Central Library.
When the Friends of the Library was formed, the former mayor and other
library trustees helped the building expand in 1952.
The late mayor is credited today with being one of the leaders who had
vision enough to improve the city to the state it’s in today.
“She was just a great mayor and very open,” Grupe said. “And she was
in all sorts of social events and did a lot of wonderful things in the
community, as well as being mayor.”
* Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical
Look Back? Let us know. Contact Young Chang 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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