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Mary
Garrison
When Mary
Garrison first arrived from Nebraska forty years ago she lived in Glendale, but it didn’t take her long to relocate
to the greener pastures she perceived in Echo Park. Mary has remained in Echo
Park ever since, carving a unique reputation for herself as the neighborhood “Oracle”, according to one of Mary’s
friends. “I never thought I would be one of those people,” Mary admits,
but the woman who invented her nickname insists, “If you want to know something, you ask Mary.”
The inspiration
to move to Echo Park came on her bus route, Garrison says. “When the Glendale
bus went through this neighborhood I kept thinking about how friendly the people here were.
It was a mixture of people and I liked that.”
Garrison describes the Echo Park she moved to
in the 1960s as having “a really nice friendly, family feeling.” “On
Saturdays and Sundays, people would gather at Echo Park Lake and have little family picnics and cook some hamburgers and that
kind of thing.”
Echo Park’s key location to other areas
of Los Angeles aided Mary in discovering the many faces of her city over the years.
Garrison recalls walking from her downtown office to Little Tokyo to have lunch with Japanese-American girlfriends. “We’d go to some little hole-in-the-wall place that was great. I learned to appreciate Japanese popular music there because they would be playing their popular records
from Japan. I’d go back to my office humming songs that nobody else had
heard before.”
Although her various jobs, such as screenwriter
and assistant to a forensic psychologist, have taken Mary around the city, she has been steadfast about remaining in Echo
Park, from her first apartment on Calumet to her current home atop the hill on Portia Street.
Topics Covered:
Interview Date: February 2007
Interviewer: Alison Brady
Yvonne Suzanne Kimbrough
It was
already 1964 when a friend brought NY native Yvonne Suzanne Kimbrough and her husband to Echo Park. They would raise two children
here and find a small haven in the sprawling city they could call home. “Sunset Blvd is like a main, big boulevard.
It goes all the way to the ocean but our part of it is a community.”
Physically,
the landscape of Echo Park hasn’t changed much since Suzanne arrived but this activist has seen the community around
her as changing and varied as ever with her self and other pro-active community members at the helm. “I guess I was
always active but more so in the community”, she says. “We’ve had a lot of fundraisers in the house over
the years. A lot of spaghetti dinners.”
Her local activism began when
her son got involved with the National Farm Workers Association. “A lot of us in the neighborhood got involved in the
grape boycott and the lettuce boycott. Caesar Chavez was forming the union. They had a grape boycott to tell people not to
buy grapes because of the working conditions. We went out to markets passing out literature. ”
Suzanne
is as active as ever as a member of the Echo Park Improvement Association. She is actively involved in everything from the
ongoing struggle to bring a Farmer’s Market to Echo Park to fighting the Angelus Temple’s plan to level several
houses on Lemoyne Street to make way for a parking structure. “I can’t think of anything uglier than a 7 story
parking structure,” states Kimbrough matter-of-factly.
Echo Park will continue to change with the times but rest assured Suzanne Kimbrough will be there helping the community and
looking toward a future that continues to embrace it’s past. “We fight really hard to keep Echo Park, it’s
going to eventually go but we fight really hard to keep it like it is.”
Topics Covered:
Date: May 2006
Interviewer: Heather Miller
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A relative holds up Danny Munoz in this family photo.
Danny Munoz
Daniel Munoz, who now lives in an 1889
Victorian cottage on Bellevue Avenue in Angelino Heights,
was born on February 24, 1949 in Dogtown near downtown Los Angeles. Evictions
due to eminent domain seizure forced his family to move twice,
eventually landing in Echo Park. A warm family life included extended family and friends centered on a home overseen by his homemaker mother and his tailor father. Browsing in the many downtown Los Angeles bookstores with his father was one of the highlights of Daniel's childhood. Fishing in the Los Angeles River and Echo Park Lake,
and racing homemade coasters down local hills are fond recollections
of his early years with his two younger brothers, Robert
and Arthur. Daniel's life long fascination with local history led to his activism in local historic preservation and the creation of an extensive personal library that includes old phone directories, newspapers, photos, calendars, books and more.
Topics Covered:
Birth date and place, family members and their history, Relationship to parents and siblings, home and neighborhood
life, family values and customs, celebration of holidays and special occasions, educational history, effects of the 5 and
101 freeways on people’s lives, interest in local history developed into large personal library, community activist
and historic preservation activities.
Interview Date:
May 2006
Interviewer:
Corrinna Aragon
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