Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Mission Inn is looking for a few good docents

- David Allen writes Friday, Sunday and Wednesday, his three babies. Email dallen@scng.com, phone 909-483-9339, like davidallen­columnist on Facebook and follow @ davidallen­909 on Twitter.

There are more than a century of stories at Riverside’s Mission Inn. Tourists want to hear them. And that means someone has to tell them — and within 75 minutes.

Docents lead tours four to five times daily, every day of the year except major holidays. To do so, first they need to be steeped in the history of the grand hotel, which opened in 1903, and in Riverside.

And that means weeks of classes and practice runs with seasoned docents.

“I tell people, we’re going to hit you with a lot of informatio­n. You’re going to be overwhelme­d,” says Steve Lech, who is director of docent training, and who also co-writes this newspaper’s Back in the Day column, not necessaril­y in order of importance.

Typically, 35 to 40 sign up in a burst of optimism, 20 to 25

It turns out the Mission Inn’s Taft Chair, scene of many a tourist’s photo, can hold two people, in this case Robyne Williams, left, and Rose Escamillo. Standing from left are James Ranger, Steve Lech and Jarod Hoogland, all with the Mission Inn Foundation.

actually attend and eight to 10 finish, Lech says.

A new round of classes will

soon start. Jarod Hoogland, executive director of the Mission Inn Foundation, invites yours truly to meet at the hotel Wednesday with docents Robyne Williams, Rose Escamillo and James Ranger, plus Steve.

“The people who are docents,” Jarod says, “turn out to be Riverside’s best ambassador­s.”

Docents obviously need to have curiosity about local history. Robyne wasn’t sure she did until names and origins of Riverside streets came up and she realized these were part of her daily landscape. She’s been a docent since 2003. “I’m not tired of it yet either,” she says.

For Rose, who did her training via Zoom during the pandemic, it was finding out about people whose names are attached to familiar places, like White Park or North High.

You don’t have to be retired to be involved, although it helps. James fit in the training and then his docent duties as a full-time UC Riverside student.

Not everyone is cut out to be a docent. You need to be physically able to climb flights of

stairs and stay on your feet. Also, mentally able to recall facts, tell stories and respond to questions. Liking people is necessary, too. Yes, even tourists.

We didn’t get into the ability to walk backward while reciting “we’re walking, we’re walking,” but I suppose that’s a given.

Has any would-be docent been too shy, unable to retain facts or gone rogue?

“All of the above!” Robyne exclaims, chuckling. She adds: “We don’t give up on people easily. But some people are not cut out for this. It becomes obvious to most of them.”

Some 15,000 a year booked tours pre-COVID-19. Many are hotel guests or are downtown for the Festival of Lights. For out-of-town family members visiting a local relative, it’s something to do. (Or, for the local relative, a way to get rid of them for a couple of hours.)

What do people ask about on a Mission Inn tour?

“Was this a mission?” Steve says, feigning a

tourist’s sense of gullibilit­y. It was never a mission, but it’s meant to evoke one.

“Can we go in the catacombs?” James says. There are none.

“I want to see the church,” Steve says.

There are chapels for weddings but no church.

“Is this place haunted?” Robyne asks.

That subject is off-limits. I imagine the ghosts prefer not to be gossiped about.

The foundation, a nonprofit, has been in charge of tours since 1985. Its roster of docents numbers about 100, with a new crop added annually

to replace people who drop out for various reasons.

The foundation is doing something new: It’s shortening the training to four months and aiming for two rounds per year, not one. Steve assures me that none of the history is being cut. Jarod, in charge since January 2020, says the compressio­n is more on the administra­tive end.

What are the perks? Meeting a diverse range of people, learning about your community and, Jarod says, “having access to the hotel that no one else gets.”

The deadline to apply is June 18. Details are online at missioninn­museum.org/join/volunteer/, or you can phone 951788-9556 or visit the Mission Inn Museum, 3696 Main St.

“There’s so much eclectic history here,” Jarod says. “You could tell stories forever.”

But you have only 75 minutes.

brIEfly

Kassandra Gonzalez arrived at Riverside Community Hospital late Tuesday afternoon for her induction labor. To assist, her mother was dropped off at the hospital by another pregnant daughter, Iran Gonzalez — who went into labor in the parking lot. Well, she was already at the hospital, so she quickly checked herself in. And that’s how Iran gave birth to Mateo at 7 p.m. and Kassandra to Elix at 9:44 p.m. Both sisters now have three children each. And two of them will share a June 7 birthday.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAVID ALLEN — STAFF ?? The Mission Inn Foundation is looking for docents willing to lead tours around the famed downtown Riverside hotel. From left are Steve Lech, Jarod Hoogland, Rose Escamillo, James Ranger and Robyne Williams.
PHOTOS BY DAVID ALLEN — STAFF The Mission Inn Foundation is looking for docents willing to lead tours around the famed downtown Riverside hotel. From left are Steve Lech, Jarod Hoogland, Rose Escamillo, James Ranger and Robyne Williams.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Two sisters, Iran Gonzalez, left, with baby Mateo, and Kassandra Gonzalez, with baby Elix, delivered their newbords within three hours of each other Tuesday at Riverside Community Hospital.
COURTESY PHOTO Two sisters, Iran Gonzalez, left, with baby Mateo, and Kassandra Gonzalez, with baby Elix, delivered their newbords within three hours of each other Tuesday at Riverside Community Hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States