First Yorba Linda City Council members reflect on city's initial years in their oral history interviews
My Sept.
8 column – part of an occasional series related to Yorba Linda's
50th anniversary – recalled that Herb Warren was the
only person elected to the first City Council who opposed
incorporation, although he later stated that those who supported
cityhood were “farsighted.”
Three
other members of the city's first governing body elected from a
still-record field of 27 candidates also reflected on Yorba Linda's
initial years as a city in separate interviews with Dennis Swift for
the Cal State Fullerton oral history program in 1988.
Two –
Roland Bigonger and Bill Ross – were pleased with the city's
evolution during the first 20 years, while the third – Whit
Cromwell – expressed reservations about the city's direction.
Bigonger,
the top vote-getter in the 1967 election, became the city's first
mayor. He was re-elected to a two-year term in 1970 but didn't run in
1972. He won another term in 1986 but lost re-election in 1990.
“I
think that Yorba Linda has developed nicely,” Bigonger told Swift.
“I think that the first city council intended this kind of
development to occur....I think that the General Plan adopted in 1972
set the pattern for development – the large lots we had.”
Bigonger
added: “I feel that the city is a good city to live in, and I would
probably choose Yorba Linda, if I had to choose a place to live in,”
noting, “I am very pleased with the way Yorba Linda has developed.”
Ross was
a Yorba Linda Homeowners' Association president who lobbied county
officials on zoning and development matters before incorporation. He
placed third in the 1967 election, but ironically, the low-density
advocate lost when opposed by a slower-growth slate in 1970.
“I
think the city as a whole came about and was originally planned for
by our early people,” Ross told Swift. “It is just a great place
to live and have kids grow. We love it today and we loved it then.”
He
added: “Yorba Linda has been very good to me and my six children
and our successful real estate office and contracting business. We
have been here now for over a quarter of a century – it certainly
feels like home.”
Cromwell,
as postmaster, wasn't active in the cityhood movement. He ran second
in 1967, was re-elected to a two-year term in 1970, sat out 1972,
but won a third, final term in 1974.
He also
served as a director of the Yorba Linda Water District 1978-1990.
Yorba
Linda “did not come out like I wanted it to one-hundred percent,”
he told Swift. “I think we completely missed it, because what we
did was drive (out) ordinary people....I wanted to see my kids right
here, where they had their roots in the ground.”
Cromwell
added: “I really wanted to see a little different type of city than
what we have,” but he noted, “I am still here, so it must be
alright.”
Burt
Brooks, the fifth member of the first council, wasn't interviewed for
the oral history program. Bigonger died in 1997, Cromwell in 2001 and
Ross in 2010.
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