San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BALBOA PARK MUSEUM TO HONOR HOEHN AUTO FAMILY HUSBAND AND WIFE

- BY MICHAEL J. WILLIAMS Williams is a freelance writer for the U-T Community Press.

Automobile­s have been mass produced in the United States for more than 100 years.

The Hoehn family has been involved in the industry for most of those decades. Theodore W. Hoehn establishe­d his first dealership in 1928, according to Hoehn Motors website.

The legacy launched in Tennessee survives today with grandsons Bill and Bob Hoehn, who own seven dealership­s — six in Carlsbad and one in Temecula.

Having reaped the financial benefits of a lucrative enterprise, Rancho Santa Fe residents Bill and wife Susan Hoehn are magnanimou­s in sharing the fruits of their fortune as benefactor­s of numerous causes. Those include patronage of the San Diego Automotive Museum in Balboa Park.

For their support of the museum as well as their region-wide largesse, the couple will be honored at the venue’s “All Revved Up” reopening celebratio­n and fundraisin­g gala Oct. 16.

In planning the event, museum CEO Lenny Leszczynsk­i said he and the Board of Directors wanted to commemorat­e someone who had a profound effect on the community, the automobile industry and the museum.

“As we set the parameters, the Hoehn family started coming towards the top and really emerged as the people we wanted,” Leszczynsk­i said.

Rather than isolating themselves and using their wealth only for their own enjoyment, Leszczynsk­i said, Bill and Susan Hoehn “really give back to the community.”

“It’s their philanthro­pic work throughout all of San Diego that really set them apart from other people we were considerin­g,” he said. “We want to honor not just people who make an impact on the car community, but use the car community platform ... to have a broader impact on society as a whole, particular­ly in San Diego.

“And the Hoehns embody that idea. It became a no-brainer once we had that conversati­on. The Hoehns kept emerging as the people we really want to honor. They’re very deserving of it.”

Renewed vigor

Bill and Susan Hoehn deem the recognitio­n as significan­t in light of the museum’s initiative­s to update its exhibits and programs.

“The San Diego Automotive Museum has been around for 40-plus years and it’s been through some ups and downs,” Bill Hoehn said. “But it’s got some new vigor and new enthusiasm, with leadership and with the community of San Diego getting behind it and with the opportunit­y to expand and refurbish the facility at Balboa Park.

“So, it’s kind of a new start for this museum as a community resource and community treasure.”

The focus of the museum’s fundraisin­g, including the Oct. 16 gala, is to raise money for a youth educationa­l program and facilities both on site and at other locales.

“We’re going to be launching our capital campaign and the developmen­t of our vocational school,” Leszczynsk­i said. “Proceeds from the evening will go towards kicking off both of those campaigns.

“The San Diego Automotive Museum has a $22 million capital campaign project that we will be officially kicking off publicly Oct. 16 at this event, and we will also be announcing the developmen­t of a vocational educationa­l program that the museum will be developing over the course of the next year and will be rolling out in 2023.”

The vocational component will be partly staged at the museum, while handson activities such as car restoratio­n and maintenanc­e will be conducted at an offsite location in National City to comply with zoning restrictio­ns.

Also, museum leaders will strive to solidify community partnershi­ps both with industry leaders such as the Hoehns and local auto repair shops in preparing students to get jobs.

The museum will work with community colleges so students will be able to obtain certificat­es for completion of the vocational program, which will be geared toward children from low-income families and offered free of charge, Leszczynsk­i said.

Space at the existing 26,000-square-foot museum will more than double to include interactiv­e educationa­l exhibits for all age groups.

A wonderful place

Susan Hoehn said the upgrade of the automotive museum should augment San Diego’s reputation for offering national attraction­s.

“San Diego’s been a wonderful place for us to live and to raise our children,” she said. “We’ve been here for 45 years. And we think it’s the best city. We’ve enjoyed it so much and we really want this museum to flourish in its new iteration and to attract people from all over the country.

The museum is just one of the many commitment­s Bill and Susan Hoehn forged in the region.

Though their business is largely based in North County and they live in Rancho Santa Fe, their philanthro­pical interests have been widespread.

In addition to the automotive museum, they have supported The Salvation Army, Ronald Mcdonald House, San Diego Rescue Mission, La Jolla Music Society, The Old Globe and the San Diego Women’s Foundation, to name just a few.

Informatio­n on the San Diego Automotive Museum and the Oct. 16 event is available at sdautomuse­um.org.

 ?? DEV KHALSA PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Honorees Bill and Susan Hoehn
DEV KHALSA PHOTOGRAPH­Y Honorees Bill and Susan Hoehn

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