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Sunday,
May 24,
 2009
G. Aubrey Davidson, the man behind San Diego’s first Exposition
The man behind the Expo: Gilbert Aubrey Davidson
In 1886, as an 18-year-old, G. Aubrey Davidson moved to San Diego with his parents and soon became a bookkeeper in the Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe Railway office. He relocated to their Los Angeles agency two years later. In 1907 he gave up the railroad career and returned here, where he became founder and president of the Southern Trust & Savings Bank and its successor, the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank of SD.

Davidson served as president of the city’s Chamber of Commerce in 1909, when he proposed the idea of hosting a World's Fair to call attention to San Diego and bolster an economy still shaky from the Wall Street panic of 1907. The Panama Canal was scheduled for completion in 1915 and we would be the first American port on the Pacific Coast north of this new shorter connection to the East Coast.

San Francisco also wanted to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal and won the right to host the officially recognized Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915. Preparations here went ahead without formal recognition and the Panama-California Exposition of 1915-1916 would change the face of Balboa Park and the future of San Diego.

On January 1, 1915, an opening day a crowd of 15,000 people visited the Expo in Balboa Park. As Exposition president G. Aubrey Davidson gave the official opening address at the Spreckels Organ Pavilion. This is a prescient excerpt from that speech:
“These buildings of this Exposition have not been thrown up with the careless unconcern that characterizes a transient pleasure resort. They are a part of the surroundings, with the aspect of permanence and far-seeing design. They might endure for a century and still appear the things of beauty which they are. Time will hallow them with its gentle touch.”

As the 2015 Exposition Centennial approaches, we celebrate the foresight of those who gave us San Diego’s Panama-California Exposition and the heart of Balboa Park.

About the Author: Michael Kelly is president of The Committee of One Hundred, which this Friday will honor Davidson for his vision with its first Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue Award. (This article will be featured in the “Pioneer” chapter of the upcoming HQ7.)
Saturday,
May 23,
 2009
“If the San Diego Police Department started ticketing drivers who do not stop for pedestrians, who speed, who fail to indicate turns, who jump red/orange lights and who continue to use hand-held cell phones, we’d really have a fortune for the city. In fact...it would probably wipe out the city deficit.”
— Pedestrian who daily uses 6th, 5th and 4th avenues from Bankers Hill to Hillcrest
Friday,
May 22,
 2009

Harvey Milk

Happy Birthday, Harvey

Harvey Milk is an inspiration to Californians who believe in fairness and equality. He fought for many of the issues we value today, including access to education, public transportation, affordable housing and protecting the environment. Harvey Milk gave his life for what he believed in, and with that courage and sacrifice he gave hope to an entire generation of gay and lesbian people whose basic humanity and freedom had been denied and dishonored.

— State Senator Mark Leno

Thursday,
May 21,
 2009
“We think the school district singled out and discriminated against Natalie’s speech because of its content. This is not sex education. This is a presentation is about Harvey Milk, a historical figure who happened to be gay.
— ACLU Legal Director David Blair-Loy in yesterday’s letter to Ramona school district
Wednesday,
May 20,
 2009
Hillcrest Clean TEAM (Together Everyone Achieves More)

Pitch in to help clean-up Hillcrest?

All volunteers will receive a newly designed orange t-shirt in exchange for a three hours to make our neighborhood look better. Mark you calendars for Saturday morning May 30th from 9am-noon. Meet at 8:45 under the Hillcrest sign (Fifth & Robinson). Everyone will get coffee, treats and a shirt.

Areas for concentrated work will be sidewalks/gutters; graffiti clean-up, taking illegal posters off lampposts and removing weeds from the street edges. Please join this great effort to spruce up our neighborhood.

Tuesday,
May 19,
 2009
A taller Sunroad building




Sunroad Enterprises’ lawsuit against the city of San Diego over a disputed office building near Montgomery Field met its end yesterday, capping a controversy that erupted nearly three years ago. (click for a timeline beginning in March of 2006)
Monday,
May 18,
 2009
“What the audit shows is that Fabiani and his friends were very good at shaking us down. I’ll bluntly admit that it’s not the Chargers’ problem. They asked for the world and the politicians gave them the sun, the moon and the solar system.”
City Councilman Carl DeMaio

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