Los Angeles Times

Battle over La Crescenta park’s past comes to a close

Historical marker notes area’s German American roots but also its Nazi ties.

- By Andy Nguyen andy.nguyen@latimes.com Nguyen writes for Times Community News.

As the United States grapples with a seemingly growing movement of white supremacy and nationalis­m entering mainstream culture, a yearlong battle over a La Crescenta park’s Nazi past has come to a close.

On Friday, officials with the Los Angeles County Parks and Recreation Department unveiled a historical marker at Crescenta Valley Community Regional Park that showcased the area’s German American roots but also its ties to Nazi Germany.

“We’re so proud that this community worked with the county to best describe the history of this park and the German American culture in Crescenta Valley,” Mercy Santoro, a deputy director with the parks department, said at the unveiling.

Santoro said the work did not come without difficult conversati­ons among community members.

A portion of the park, at 3901 Dunsmore Ave., was formerly known as Hindenburg Park, named after former German President Paul von Hindenburg. In February 2016, a controvers­ial sign using the Hindenburg name was erected, welcoming parkgoers in German.

Privately funded by the Tricentenn­ial Foundation, a German-heritage organizati­on, the sign caused an uproar among some community members.

The Jewish Federation of the Greater San Gabriel and Pomona Valleys said the sign was a reminder of Nazi atrocities and the area’s Nazi past, creating an unwelcomin­g atmosphere — all because of the park’s namesake.

Hindenburg was president of Germany from 1925 to 1934, and during his tenure he appointed Adolf Hitler as the country’s chancellor.

Historians view this move as a contributi­ng factor to the fall of the Weimar Republic and Hitler’s ascendancy as leader of Nazi Germany.

During the 1930s and ’40s in La Crescenta, several proNazi rallies were held on the park’s grounds. The rallies were staged by the Bund, a U.S. political group modeled after the Nazi Party.

The installati­on of the Hindenburg sign led to weeks of meetings and debates about heritage versus history, culminatin­g with the Los Angeles Community Commission on Human Relations voting to take down the sign in May 2016. Many applauded the commission’s decision.

“The truth, and the complete truth, is really important,” said Mona Field, professor emeritus at Glendale Community College. “Rememberin­g the good as well as the bad, there is no neutral position when it comes to Nazism, anti-Semitism or racism.”

Jason Moss, executive director of the Jewish Federation, said the new marker will show the true and full history of the park, and it will stand the test of time.

“This is an example of how people can come together and work through difference­s through dialogue versus resorting to violence,” he said.

Hans Eberhard, chairman of the Tricentenn­ial Foundation, congratula­ted the efforts behind the marker, but added he wasn’t trying to cause any controvers­y. He said that after a certain point he gave up the fight to keep the Hindenburg Park sign.

“I was trying to preserve history,” he said. “We weren’t honoring the man Hindenburg, but the park.”

 ?? Historical Society of Crescenta Valley ?? DURING the 1930s and ’40s, pro-Nazi rallies were held at Crescenta Valley Community Regional Park. They were staged by the Bund, a U.S. political group that modeled itself after Germany’s Nazi Party.
Historical Society of Crescenta Valley DURING the 1930s and ’40s, pro-Nazi rallies were held at Crescenta Valley Community Regional Park. They were staged by the Bund, a U.S. political group that modeled itself after Germany’s Nazi Party.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States