By the late
1960’s, community members, concerned with preserving the heritage of Covina's early pioneers, had flooded the Covina
Library with a vast amount of historical material. Rinda Pollard and Lucy Wheeler
were two of the most prolific contributors. Rinda Pollard brought information and enthusiasm, and Lucy Wheeler, an amateur
photographer, meticulously assembled scrapbooks that documented important events in our city's history.
Covina's Librarian, Dorothy Weeding realized that the Library simply was
not going to have enough room to store the promising collection. She asked the Friends of the Library if the group would be
interested in organizing an historical society to take care of the items. Soon
a plan would emerge to go beyond storing the collection and instead exhibit and share it.
The Covina
Valley Historical Society organized in 1969. The first meeting of the Society
took place at the library in January of that year. Those attending selected officers
shortly thereafter. They elected Charles Colver as our first President, Laura Brady as our first Secretary and Karl Ponsey
as our first Treasurer.
Increasing
membership was the first order of business for the fledgling group. Meetings
moved from the Library to the Community Room at the Episcopal Church; featuring delicious potlucks and guest speakers who
gave programs about local history.
The collection
of artifacts remained at the library, but the hunt for an appropriate place to display them had begun. Little did they know that such an opportunity would soon arise from a contaminated well and a jail too small.
The Firehouse
Jail was built in 1911 for a volunteer Fire Department and one City Marshall. Covina
was a rural town with a population of about 2000.
In 1974, the
City Council of Covina decided to cap City Well #2, located just outside Covina's
Firehouse Jail building, because fertilizer pollution had tainted its water.
In 1976, it
became clear that more than four jail cells were necessary for a modern police department to function. The decision was made to build a new public safety facility, with a modern fire department headquarters. A site was chosen at the east end of the old school lot in the center of town, along
Second Avenue, facing Citrus. The new station is about two blocks north and a little east of the original Firehouse Jail and the facility
is still in use today.
Since the
old firehouse jail site was right behind City Hall, Society members considered it an ideal home for our community museum.
The building was (and is!) small, but it provided the perfect venue. Bill Temple, Karl Ponsey, Woody Core, Emp Knorr and Vivian
Quick spearheaded the effort to secure the historic building for the Society. The
City agreed.
So, the next
challenge for the group was to transform the Firehouse Jail into an appropriate place to display artifacts and store historic
documents. Concrete settling basins had to be broken up and filled in. A new slab was poured, a door between the firehouse
and the jail was added along with carpeting and paint. Donations of display cases poured in. Artifacts were gathered together
and displays were built. Although the Museum is small (only about 2000 square feet), it offers visitors an intimate and interesting
glimpse into Covina's past.
In 1977, the
Covina Woman's Club became our permanent meeting place for quarterly general meetings of the Society and we still meet there
today.