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Newport Beach Chronological Timeline

1776 Franciscan fathers of San Juan Capistrano Mission began administration of Newport Bay area. 

1810 Spanish land grant of Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana (including the Newport mesa and western mainland shoreline of Newport Bay) made to Jose Antonio Yorba and Juan Pablo Peralta. 

1842 Mexican land grant of Rancho San Joaquin (including the Newport Upper Bay and most of the mainland shoreline of lower bay) made to Jose Andres Sepulveda. 

1860 First attempt by U.S. Coast Survey to make a preliminary examination of the Santa Ana River estuary (lower bay). 

1864 Newport Bay holdings of Joss Sepulveda are sold to Flint, Bixby, and Irvine. James Irvine obtains partners’ interests in 1876. 

1868 Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana partitioned, its holdings bordering Newport Bay going to Flint, Bixby, and Irvine, and to attorneys Andrew Classell and Albert B. Chapman. 

1870 The steamer Vaquero enters Newport Bay; Newport Landing established on the inner shores. "The name 'Newport' was suggested by a Mrs. Perkins,' according to Ellen Lee. 

1870 Vaquero is sold; little if any activity on Newport Bay for three years. 

1878 Steamer Newport sold to Pacific Coast Steamship Co., but continues on San Francisco-Newport run until 1889. 

1887 Survey made by W.H.H. Benyuard of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to determine feasibility of U.S. government-financed improvements to Newport Bay. Estimated cost: $1.2 million. Failing to get a federal appropriation for this work, the McFaddens build an ocean wharf in the summer and fall of 1888. 

1889 McFadden brothers move their shipping business from inside the bay to new "outside landing" on peninsula oceanfront. 

1891 Completion of the Santa Ana and Newport Railway. Wharf damaged when outer 600 feet are washed away by storm on Feb. 22, but repairs soon made.

1892 James McFadden receives title to peninsula from 40th St. to 9th St., purchased for a dollar an acre as government swamp and overflow land. McFadden has town site laid out near the wharf, where lots are leased by the year. 

1896 James McFadden buys marsh island in the bay (later dredged) and filled to create Balboa, Lido, and Harbor islands. 

1899 Santa Ana and Newport Railroad and wharf sold to the Southern Pacific.

1902 Remaining McFadden Newport Bay holdings sold to W.S. Collins and A.C. Hanson. 

1903-07 Establishment of subdivisions of West Newport, East Newport, Bay Island, Balboa, Corona del Mar, Balboa Islands, and Port Orange. 

1904 Pacific Electric trolley lines reach Orange County, first at Seal Beach.

1905 Pacific Electric Railroad reaches Newport in 1905, connecting city by rail with Los Angeles - the start of rapid transit. 

1906 Pacific Electric rails extended to Balboa. Balboa Pavilion completed at cost of $15,000. Newport Beach becomes a city. Newport annexes Balboa. Balboa Ferry starts.

1907 West Newport canals dredged, creating Newport Island. 

1908 Gondolier G. Scarpa launches idea for Tournament of Lights. 

1909 Famed actress and cosmopolite Madame Helena Modjeska dies at her home on Bay Island. 

1910 McFadden brothers sell Newport, Lido, and Balboa Island for $35,000. 

1911 Glenn Martin flies from Newport Bay to Catalina in 37 minutes setting longest over-water record in aviation history Newport Harbor lines established, ratified by Congress in 1917. 

1914 County Hospital opens in Orange. Storm inundates Newport. 

1915 Bond issue brings 108 miles of good roads to county, including Newport Beach. 

1916 Balboa Island annexed to city of Newport Beach. Flood inundates county when Santa Ana River and Santiago Creek burst banks. 

1917-21 Harbor work done by city of Newport Beach and Orange County, including construction of 1,900-foot-long west jetty, construction of Bitter Point Dam, diversion of Santa Ana River from bay, and dredging of city and county channels. Cost to city: $290,000; to county, $500,000. 

1917 Barge scene for silent movie spectacle, Cleopatra, starring Theda Bara, filmed in Newport Harbor. Newporters register for draft as war is declared on Germany. 

1918 Spanish influenza hits county. 12 dead in one day at Delhi. 

1919 City of Newport Beach receives title to tidelands adjacent to its boundaries. First Tournament of Lights. 

1920 Santa Ana River rechanneled by building Bitter Point dam. 

1921 Santa Ana River rechanneled from Newport Bay, to the sea. Madam Larue, The Green Dragon, and Soto's curio shop thrive in Balboa. 

1922 First Newport Yacht Regatta. Duke Kahanamoku introduces surfboarding to the western United States at Newport Beach. First sanitary sewers installed under supervision of Paul Kressley, city engineer. 

1923 Corona del Mar annexed to city of Newport Beach. The Eddie Martin Airport opens, later to become Orange County Airport, the nation's second busiest. Old McFadden area cleaned up. First public restrooms built at McFadden place. 

1924 General Lansing Beach, retired chief of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, conducts survey and recommends expenditure of $1.2 million for Newport Harbor improvements. Eight drown at Newport when launch Adieu capsizes. Balboa Yacht Club founded. 

1925 Dr. Albert A. Michelson establishes speed of light with mile-long experimental tube on Irvine Beach. 

1926 County voters defeat bond issues to finance $1.2 million in Harbor improvements. Coast Highway opened by Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford. 

1927 City of Newport Beach votes $500,000 to extend west jetty and build new east jetty. Metropolitan Water District organized, eventually to bring Colorado River water to Southern California. Typhoid epidemic hits area. 

1928 Emergency dredging of harbor entrance by Citizens' Harbor Committee. Rendezvous Ballroom opens at Balboa. First Transpacific Yacht Race to Hawaii leaves Newport Bay. 

1929 Beginning of the Great Depression. City of Newport Beach votes $200,000 for harbor entrance dredging and construction of rock groins. Academy Award winner All Quiet On The Western Front is filmed above Corona del Mar. 

1929 Dedication of a new City library, constructed in East Newport Park on Balboa Boulevard (now Balboa Branch Library). Budget of $7,000 for the 2,200 sq. ft.building.

1930 Lido Island dredging and filling completed. 

1932 South of Newport Beach, the largest capture of contraband whisky of Prohibition period occurs when the ship Daylight is seized off Salt Creek in South Laguna. 

1933 Federal government allocates $1.14 million and Orange County voters endorse bond issue of $640,000 to finance final harbor reclamation projects of 1934-35. Epic earthquake causes $8 million in damages, takes 12 lives in county; epicenter off Newport Beach. An indication that there was human habitation in the area 15,000 to 18,000 years ago comes with the discovery in Laguna Beach of the skull now known as 'Laguna Woman.' 

1934 Irvine Co. salt works established at head of Newport Back Bay. 

1935 Newport Harbor dredged and jetties extended. First 'Flight of Snowbirds.” Howard Hughes sets new speed record at Martin's Airport with 351 M.P.H. flight. First Rendezvous Ballroom fire. 

1936 Dedication of Newport Harbor; FDR opens the $4 million harbor by telegraph key from Washington, D.C. Total expenditure on Newport Harbor improvements by private, city, county, and federal agencies between 1906 and 1936: $3,956,800. Senate appropriates $13 million for Orange County flood projects. 

1938 Devastating storm pounds county and harbor leaving 119 dead, 68,400 acres flooded, 2,000 homeless. 

1939 Mercury hits 108 degrees during eight-day heat wave, brings droves to Newport Beach. High winds, riptides destroy county piers; numerous drownings and small craft losses in harbor. 

1941 First blackout (Dec.10). MWD water arrives from Colorado River. World War II is on, and Newport Beach shipbuilders are destined to play an important role in helping with the country's defense. 

1942 Santa Ana Army Air Base opens along with Army Air Force West Coast Training Center, attracting servicemen to Newport Beach for rest and relaxation when time allows. 

1943 El Toro Marine Base opens on 4,000 acres of Irvine Ranch, attracting thousands of recruits to Orange County, many of whom finally settled in Newport Beach. Lighter-Than-Air Station south of Tustin gets 1,600 acres to house blimps on coastal submarine patrol, making sure the Pacific Coast - and Newport Beach - are safe from Japanese invasion. 

1944 Newport Beach businesses enjoy prosperity from the patronage of military stationed nearby. New restaurants and watering holes spring up to meet the demand.

1945 War ends, thank God. 

1946 Santa Ana Army Air Base closes. Real estate begins to boom. 

1947 James Irvine, 80, dies in Montana. Sensational Overell trial, longest in county history, results in acquittal for Bud Gollum and Beulah Overell on charge of dynamiting her parents to death aboard Newport yacht. 

1948 First Newport-Ensenada Yacht Race. Big election, new city government takes over. Balboa, Corona del Mar, Balboa Island Improvement Associations start.

1950 A $500,000 gift from Hoag Foundation assures construction of a hospital for Newport; flying saucers reported over the city. 

1951 Orange Coast YMCA organized; oil found on city property. 

1952 W.C. Collins, developer of Balboa Island, dies; City Council votes to keep dogs off Balboa Island beaches; king of Iraq visits the harbor; first baby is born at Hoag Hospital. 

1953 Newport Beach City Council bans poker parlors, tables; 50,000 boys at international Boy Scout jamboree held on Irvine land. 

1954 Dora Hill elected as first woman mayor; new city charter drafted. 

1955 County takes over administration and operation of harbor. 

1956 Castaways restaurant landmark above Dover Dr. burns; freeways proposed for Orange County; official city flower, Barbara Karste Bougainvillea, is dedicated on Arbor Day. 

1957 Influx of new residents causes prices of oceanfront lots to rise to $15,000. 

1958 Big industry comes to Newport when Hughes' semiconductor plant and Aeronutronics opens; Newport Dunes opens with plans to rival Disneyland. 

1959 Star class world championships are held; Newporter Inn opens; Boy Scout house on Cliff Dr. is donated to the city. 

1959 Corona del Mar Branch Library on Marigold Avenue officially opened. Ninety percent of the $29,000 cost was donated.

1960 U.S. destroyers collide off Newport, killing 11 men; 3-ton shark is netted by fishing boat; first high-rise building appears - Vista del Lido apartments; snow falls on the, harbor. 

1961 Newport Harbor Art Museum opens. 

1962 Pacific Electric trains along the ocean are used for the last time to deliver boats to Newport. 

1963 Official Newport Beach city flag adopted, designed by 11-year-old Jeff Wilcox; Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce opposes 5th Avenue freeway; Mariners Library dedicated. 

1963 Mariners Branch Library opened with 10,000 books. Friends and others collected $15,000 for the building.

1964 Reuben E. Lee floating restaurant opens; city council passes "bed" tax for visitors of fewer than 15 days; aircraft carrier Bennington anchors at harbor entrance for public visiting; Paddleboarder Larry Capune becomes first Newporter Inn guest to register at sea. 

1965 A.J. McFadden places historical marker at McFadden (Newport) Pier; Prince Takahito Mikasa of Japan visits harbor; UCI opens with 1,600 students; city council okays horse corral at Irvine Coast Country Club. 

1966 Citizens' group forms to fight airport expansion; Bicycle trails master plan is proposed; West Newport gets streetlights; Rendezvous Ballroom burns and is demolished. 

1967 West Newport Beach homes periled by storm surf; emergency sand haul started; Fashion Island opens. 

1968 Army Corps of Engineers begins construction of rock groins along West Newport oceanfront. 

1969 Western Salt Works in Back Bay demolished by floods; Ensign newspaper wins top award in the nation for weekly reporting. 

1970 Police helicopter patrols begin; Balboa Ferry gets historic plaque; Intrepid, with Skipper Bill Ficker, wins America's Cup. 

1971 Newport voters overwhelmingly reject freeway through city, earthquake shakes homes and rattles nerves; Fun Zone saved from becoming condominiums. 

1972 Voters reject police facility and city hall at Newport Center; City Council passes restrictive height limit law; Newport Harbor High School band plays in the Rose Parade. 

1973 Orange County bus lines extend to Newport; Christmas Festival of Lights canceled due to energy crisis. 

1974 Police department moves to new facility in Newport Center; South Coast Shipyard declared an historical landmark. 

1975 The largest fire in Newport history destroys a block of commercial property on Mariner's Mile; fire department adds paramedic unit; Upper Bay becomes a marine preserve and wildlife refuge under the California Fish & Game Department. 

1976 Sheraton Hotel builds 300-room complex on Emkay Development Company Tract on Birch Street, near orange County Airport. 

1977 Newport Harbor Art Museum moves into elegant, new, 21,000-square- foot home in Newport Center. Irvine Company sold to consortium consisting of A.A. Taubman, Charles Allen, Donald Bren, Henry Ford II, and Joan Irvine Smith. Price: $337.4 million. 

1978 Peter Kremer named president. South Coast Repertory occupies new Fourth Step Theater complex in Segerstrom South Coast center. 

1979 O.W. "Dick" Richard dies. John Wayne dies. Orange County Airport renamed John Wayne Airport. 

1980 Slow-growth members of City Council - Paul Ryckoff and Ray Williams - defeated by 3-to-I margin. Newport Center Public Library opens. 

1980 Newport Center Branch Library on San Clemente Avenue opened.

1981 Balboa island bridge reconstructed. Master Plan for John Wayne Orange County Airport approved. 

1982 $15 million renovation and dredging of Upper Bay through joint efforts of Newport Beach, Irvine, Tustin, and state, county, and federal agencies. 

1983 Donald Bren becomes sole owner of The Irvine Company. 

1984 City Council incumbents Phil Maurer, John Cox, and Ruthelyn Plummer easily reelected. 

1985 Federal court approves John Wayne Orange County Airport expansion plans and agreement with Newport Beach. 

1986 Voters reject expansion and total build out plans for Newport Center, in special election resulting from referendum. 

1987 Joan Irvine Smith's suit against Donald Bren and The Irvine Company goes to trial. The Irvine Company gives $10.5 million tract to Newport Harbor Art Museum for new $50-million building at the corner of Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard. Prominent builders and community activists Jim Ray and T. Duncan Stewart die. 

1988 Death claims prominent community leaders Dorothy Hardcastle, A. Vincent Jorgensen, John Macnab, and Ladislaw "Laddie" Reday. City council sponsors history of Newport Beach's 'First Century.'

1989 The Newport Beach Public Library Foundation is incorporated.

1990 Development of the Newport Coast area begins.

1993 Military base closures announced by federal government. El Toro Marine Corps Air Station makes the list, sparking controversy about its potential reuse as commercial airport.  

1994 Dedication ceremony held for new Central Library. Initiative designating El Toro as future commercial airport passes.

1995 Orange County Board of Supervisors becomes the reuse authority for the El Toro air station.

1996 Inaugural Newport Beach International Film Festival held.

1999 El Toro base is closed.

2000 The Greenlight Initiative requiring voter approval of major development projects passes in Newport Beach. Countywide measure passes requiring approval of airport and other large public works projects by two-thirds of voters.  

2001 County supervisors adopt plan to convert El Toro into commercial airport. Opponents place initiative on ballot to overturn earlier measure and rezone El Toro as a park.  

2002 Newport Coast and Santa Ana Heights annexation as part of Newport Beach is completed. County voters approve measure changing designation of El Toro from future airport to park and other uses. FAA approves agreement restricting noise levels and airport operating hours at John Wayne Airport. State grant awarded for the Donna & John Crean Mariners Branch Library. 

2003 Orange County ’s reputation as a high-end tourist destination is given a boost by the opening of three new luxury hotels, including the Balboa Bay Club Resort and Spa.

2004 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers agrees to dispose offshore 400,000 cubic yards of dredged Santa Ana River sand in response to residents’ complaints about initial plan that would have spread this sand on Newport’s beaches. Cast members and producers of the Fox network hit series “The OC” visit Newport Beach and are given keys to the city.

Sources:

1776-1988:

James P. Felton. Newport Beach: The First Century, 1888-1988. Newport Beach Historical Society, 1988.

1989-2004:

Compiled from various sources including the Daily Pilot archives, ProQuest database (for articles from the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register), County of Orange website at www.ocgov.com.

contact the library: (949) 717-3800