Lemon Grovians lauded for services to history

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On March 8 on the 50th anniversary of its blockbuster, annual conference on regional history, the Congress of History of San Diego and Imperial Counties (www.congressofhistory.org) gave important awards to five present and former Lemon Grove residents for enriching and advancing the history of the region. The Congress’s vice president Louise Torio (chair, Friends of the Villa Montezuma, Inc.) presented the awards.

On March 8 on the 50th anniversary of its blockbuster, annual conference on regional history, the Congress of History of San Diego and Imperial Counties (www.congressofhistory.org) gave important awards to five present and former Lemon Grove residents for enriching and advancing the history of the region. The Congress’s vice president Louise Torio (chair, Friends of the Villa Montezuma, Inc.) presented the awards.

Helen Halmay, a Lemon Grove resident from early childhood, received the Media Award for her more than 20 years of editing Adelante, the bimonthly newsletter of the Congress of History. Adelante is an indispensable round up of historical activities, editorials and information read statewide.  

Halmay’s editorial and design expertise emerged in the late 1970s when she began issuing the first newsletters of the Lemon Grove Historical Society during its formative period when her parents, Elizabeth and Paul McCormick, served on the early executive boards.

The Mary Ward Memorial Award for Historic Archives and Records Management went to the San Diego Family/Search Center (www.familysearch.org), the free, genealogical research resource operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at 4195 Camino Del Rio South, San Diego.

Eva Peterson, who grew up on a large chicken ranch in Lemon Grove, accepted the award for the Center. The award honors outstanding effort in the organization and preservation of historical materials and is named for the late San Diego County historian/archivist Mary Ward.

The Ben Dixon Award, the Congress of History’s highest award for major, long-term contributions to enriching and enhancing the cultural and historical materials of the region, went to Janne LaValle and Kathleen Strzelecki, painters of the huge Lemon Grove History Mural, 3308 Main Street, Lemon Grove.  The mural, eight years in the making, depicts the history of the community from antiquity to modern times and is the city’s first public art work.

LaValle, now an Oregon resident, was a former president of the Lemon Grove School Board and Soroptimist International of Lemon Grove, who resided here for many years and won renown for her exquisite landscapes and architectural paintings.

Strzelecki, a 22-year resident of Lemon Grove, just concluded an acclaimed solo art exhibition, “An American Family,” that was held over by popular demand in the Lemon Grove Library.

In a surprise announcement, a third Ben Dixon Award was presented to Helen Ofield, president of the Lemon Grove Historical Society, for her leadership on the Lemon Grove History Mural, creation of the Parsonage Museum of Lemon Grove and restoration of the 1928 H. Lee House as the city’s cultural center.

In the ceremony’s most touching moment, the Award of Honor was given to Federico and Lily Kellenberger of the Corredor Historico CAREM, A.C., Tecate, Mexico, whose mission is to protect, preserve, restore, and share the historical and cultural heritage of Baja California.

This year’s conference theme was “A Half Century of Local History:  Past, Present and Future.” Among 20 lecturers were Louise Torio (Villa Montezuma), Gabe Selak (San Diego History Center), Michael Kelly (Commitee of 100), Richard Carrico (Kumeyaay of San Diego), Linda Canada (Japanese American Historical Society), Helen Ofield (Lemon Grove Historical Society), and other distinguished speakers from throughout San Diego County.

Dianne P. Cowen, president of the Congress of History, urged the audience to attend the 2015 conference focusing on the centennial of Balboa Park.