Leisure World Seal Beach is an active-seniors’ retirement community opened in 1962 that introduced many innovations characterizing later senior property developments. When built, it was the nation's first mass-marketed housing project, first gated senior community, first all-electric community, and the first to have a health insurance plan and access to an on-site medical center included in its residents’ monthly payments. At its opening, it was the world's largest housing development for seniors,[1] the United States’ largest cooperative housing development, and the prototype for six other Leisure World communities across the United States[2] built by the Rossmoor Corp, co-founded by developers Ross W. Cortese and his wife, Alona Marlowe Cortese.[3] It is located in Seal Beach, which fronts the Pacific Ocean in Orange County, California. Leisure World houses approximately 9,600 residents in 6,608 one- and two-bedroom apartments and condominiums.

History

While both were taking evening real estate classes at Hollywood High School, Ross W. Cortese, a Depression-era high-school dropout, and a part-time contractor flipping homes in Compton, met former Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract actress Alona Marlowe (née Ilona L. Goetten).[4] They married in 1948, and capitalizing on her real estate license, organized a corporation under the name Alona Rey Homes, Inc. After building a small development in Culver City, the couple began undertaking larger projects such as Frematic Homes in Anaheim.[5]

Frematic Homes employed designer Cliff May’s innovative California Ranch residential concept “that let the outside in,"[6] integrating extensive prefabrication techniques, post-and-beam construction, slab floors, and floor-to-ceiling windows later incorporated into Leisure World.[7] The Frematic development also showcased the Corteses’ emerging public relations sensibility, with Westinghouse spokesperson, Hollywood actress Betty Furness, appearing in newspaper photographs with Ross Cortese in one of Frematic's “Betty Furness Beautility Kitchens.”[8]

The Corteses’ repeated successes led them, along with general contractor Murray Ward, to found Rossmoor Corp. in 1951.[9] From 1955 through 1961, the company built the “Walled City of Rossmoor,”[10] a comprehensive Orange County development the company envisioned would contain all the services of a town for its projected 10,000 residents. However, Ross Cortese's concept of a “comprehensive” development was thwarted when the hospital he wished to build for Rossmoor's population was repeatedly denied.[11]

The 30-foot-tall globe at the Leisure World Seal Beach entrance

Interest in Aging

Nonetheless, the couple's study of medical services drew their attention to the health and housing needs of older adults, whose numbers were growing rapidly in the post-war period. The Corteses’ interest culminated in the couple's $4 million gift[12] founding what became the University of Southern California’s gerontology school, now the world’s largest academic program researching older adults.[13] Alona Cortese later endowed The Alona Cortese Elder Law Center at the Chapman University School of Law, which provides pro bono legal representation for seniors.[14]

This interest influenced many of the Corteses’ future business enterprises. In 1961, upon finishing the Rossmoor housing development bordering Los Alamitos, California, Ross Cortese said the housing needs of seniors “have not been met even half-way thus far. None has answered the attendant economic, medical and sociological needs of the majority of our senior citizens.”[15]

While Arizona’s Youngtown and Sun City senior living developments had already established the concept of dedicated retirement communities,[16] the Corteses contemplated a new model for senior housing: a comprehensive cooperative development in which the residents owned not their residential unit, but a share of stock that permitted them to live in the community and own the rights to all the development’s common amenities. The community’s managers, not individual residents, would be responsible for their homes’ maintenance, painting and plumbing, appliances, and landscaping. It would be “not stuck out in the desert,” but near a city so residents could continue to enjoy a city's cultural opportunities and frequent visits from families and old friends.[17] Emulating the company's “Walled City of Rossmoor” experience, the community would be the United States’ first and largest gate-controlled, walled retirement community. One of the most important amenities was a plan offering free on-site medical care and prescriptions as part of the monthly resident's fees, again a first in a U.S. retirement community.[18]

Financing and Construction

Rossmoor Leisure World (as it was initially named) was to be built on a portion of the Hellman Ranch in what was then an un-incorporated square-mile plot in Orange County. Nearly adjacent to the walled Rossmoor development, the $150 million project ($1.4 billion in 2021 dollars)[19][20] would be the United States’ largest cooperative housing development and its first all-electric community.[21]

However, the project's scope and its “untried” cooperative ownership scheme generated skepticism among potential lenders. The Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. eventually agreed to finance the project, but stipulated the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) guarantee the loan.[22]

FHA authorities agreed, but established “very strict regulations.” Rossmoor could provide the land and the plans, but “could have no part in building, sales or management.”[23] Instead, the FHA required that separate not-for-profit corporations share the project's ownership. One, the Leisure World Foundation, would supervise the project's construction and marketing.

When residents began to move in, there would be elections from among the residents to serve on the Golden Rain Foundation (GRF) as trustees for all the development's common facilities and to provide community-wide services such as recreation and security. Finally, as each of the parcels comprising the development were populated, the 6,470 planned residential units[24] and the land on which they would be built would be controlled by “mutuals,” a third level of non-profit corporation collectively owned and managed by a board elected by residents of each of the development's parcels.[25]

Promotion

Notwithstanding the awkward governing arrangement, construction of the Seal Beach Leisure World began in mid-1961.[26] Interest rose quickly, propelled by a national marketing campaign that included a 1962 Life magazine advertisement claiming the development was “the most revolutionary new concept in housing since World War II.”[27]

The Life advertisement was part of what is thought to be the first national mass-marketing campaign for a housing project.[28] Hill and Knowlton, then the world's largest public relations firm, obtained widespread newspaper, radio and television coverage that by mid-1963 let the community claim residents from 43 states and 11 countries.[29] The Corteses’ Los Angeles-based advertising firm, Brangham Brewer, spent so much money marketing the development that Leisure World's 1963 ad budget was announced in a free-standing Advertising Age magazine item.[30]

Leisure World's prominence soon allowed the Corteses to assemble a Leisure World Foundation board headed by William G. Simon, the former head of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office and a founding director of The J. Edgar Hoover Foundation;[31] and executive vice president Kenneth E. BeLieu, the former undersecretary of both the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Army. The other seven trustees included Los Angeles Dodgers owner Walter O’Malley; Hollywood producer Mervyn LeRoy; Paramount Pictures vice president Y. Frank Freeman; Sylvester Smith Jr., a past president of the American Bar Association; and former U.S. Rep. Allan O. Hunter.[32]

Over 20% of Leisure World is devoted to green spaces and gardens.

While the development would include usual retirement amenities - a golf course, swimming pool, clubhouses and shuffleboard courts - the Seal Beach construction incorporated insights the Corteses had gained through their “desire for data about older adults.”[33] Stairs, steps and curbs would be replaced by ramps. Countertops and wide doors simplified wheelchair access. Showers had built-in seats to avoid slipping accidents.[34] An on-site medical center and pharmacy would provide free access to doctors, diagnostic services, physical therapy and medication to all residents.[35] Every mutual would include large greenbelts, and centralized parking structures would preserve the residential units’ parklike setting and encourage walking and physical activity.

Opening

On Oct. 29, 1961, about four months after construction began, the first model units, called “manors,” went on public display.[36] By day's end, 10,000 people had thronged the grounds and approximately 550 of the 844 units offered had been sold.[37] By March 1963, the administration estimated 300,000 people had toured the grounds and the model homes.[38]

The development's sub-800-square-foot units[39] drew surprisingly prosperous buyers. Even though most residents no longer worked, their annual per-capita income in 1963 was $6,000,[40] 80% higher than the national average.[41]

On June 8, 1962, a single year after construction began, the first residents moved in.[42] A year later, 5,200 of the units had been sold.[43] Over 10% of the first 4,500 units were purchased via mail transactions, many without the buyers ever having seen Leisure World.[44] All the original units were sold by late 1964.[45]

Leisure World's "Medicare"

The Corteses’ health plan, launched amid a vigorous national debate over government involvement in social welfare measures, was frequently labeled “utopian.”[46] It was an important perk touted in the extensive advertising and public relations campaigns that drew attention from national magazines, local broadcasters and newspapers throughout the United States and Canada.

The community's initial executive director, Lewis M. Letson, formerly the top administrator at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, California,[47] said Leisure World's health plan was explicit proof the free enterprise could effectively meet older adults’ health care requirements: “It indicates that there are better solutions to the medical needs of the elderly than socialized medicine.”[48]

The Corteses made major investments in the medical plan. Cortese recruited a former medical director for the United States Public Health Service, surgeon Weldon A. Williamson, to be Leisure World's medical director.[49] Leisure World was almost immediately recognized as a test bed for senior health. Within the clinic's first year, two studies, on heart and vascular diseases, were being conducted among the community's population.[50]

A healthcare center has been onsite since Leisure World's founding.

Similarly, the concentration of seniors in one well-known community located in politically conservative Orange County made Leisure World a target for the John F. Kennedy administration's push for its projected government-subsidized senior health care plan. In a 1963 visit to Leisure World, Kennedy's under-secretary for Health, Education and Welfare, Ivan A. Nestingen, mocked the American Medical Association, which he said characterized medical professionals urging government elder health care as “quacks and charlatans.”[51] After Kennedy's assassination, President Lyndon B. Johnson dispatched his and Kennedy's press secretary, Pierre Salinger, to make another personal pitch for what would become known as Medicare.[52]

Ironically, the Corteses’ health care plan precipitated their removal from direct involvement in Leisure World Seal Beach's management.[53] Almost immediately after the first Leisure World residents settled in, their recognition of the value of free doctor visits, medical tests and prescriptions overwhelmed the 10 doctors and 26 nurses Leisure World had hired to manage the community's health needs.[54] The Corteses’ projections dramatically underestimated the attraction of free health care. Instead of the predicted 6.2 doctor visits per year, Leisure World residents averaged 12 doctor visits annually.[55]

In 1963, the GRF board coped with the unexpected costs by replacing free medical services with a 20% co-pay for all services and prescriptions.[56] In 1964, when the community's governing board asked for an assessment increase, the medical care fee constituted 70% of the additional $10.50 requested.[57] The resulting resident revolt led to the 1965 GRF vs. Leisure World Foundation lawsuit that effectively severed the Corteses’ continued involvement in Leisure World-Seal Beach's administration.[58]

The rollout of the federal Medicare program, enacted by the Johnson administration in 1965, caused Leisure World to abandon its community-run health plan. On March 7, 1966, the first Leisure World residents signed up for Medicare.[59]

Services

With the exception of the free medical plan, the Corteses’ concept of a comprehensive seniors’ community was largely fulfilled. The community operates a heated swimming pool and spa, a 10,000-square-foot fitness center, and 9-hole, par-3 golf course. All were renovated or rebuilt between 2020 and 2022. Dedicated facilities are also provided for pickleball, bocce ball, ballet and dance classes, table tennis, shuffleboard and billiards.

Its five clubhouses contain studios for art, woodworking, lapidary, ceramics and needle arts. Other spaces are provided for video production, theater events and the activities of over 150 clubs.

Leisure World's clubhouses host activities for most of the community's 150 clubs.

In the wake of Orange County's 1994 bankruptcy, GRF bought the building and collection of the Orange County Library branch adjacent to Leisure World[60] and enclosed it and its 40,000-volume collection[61] within the community's security wall. In 2021, the community opened an internet-enabled learning center to host college courses, and a fully equipped cooking classroom for instruction in cuisines and nutrition. Arts events and guest speakers appear in the clubhouse meeting rooms and two specially dedicated performance venues, a 2,500-seat outdoor amphitheater that hosts a summer-long series, and a smaller stage adjoining the library.

The community has an on-site medical center managed by a private company that provides resident doctors, X-rays, laboratory services, a physical therapy clinic, optometry services, acupuncture, specialist care, and an adjacent pharmacy. Leisure World also houses a credit union; weekly newspaper; copy center; three independent, free-standing churches, with scores of other congregations meeting in clubhouse facilities; a recycling collection facility; and car wash. Leisure World is one of Seal Beach's major employers, and its approximately 175 full- and part-time workers provide maintenance, infrastructure inspection, property transfer and financial services. The GRF's security department provides patrol service, gate control and parking enforcement 24 hours a day. A Cortese-built 12.5-acre shopping center immediately outside the security wall now houses financial institutions and advisors, medical and dental offices, hair stylists, an automotive repair and service station, and stores selling golf equipment, jewelry, medical supplies, groceries and general supplies.[62] Scheduled minibus routes crisscrossing the community offer free transportation within Leisure World and connections to Orange County Transportation buses and commuter rail lines.[63]

Community volunteers provide other services. The Golden Age Foundation is a 501(c)3 charity that has donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund Leisure World projects, and scores of other community groups provide financial and volunteer help to residents and community projects.[64]

In the News

Should Elders Have Leisure?

Even before Leisure World Seal Beach was completed, the firm's huge marketing campaign assured Leisure World would be the poster child in a national discussion of the social, economic and psychological implications of age-segregated communities. While some journalists lauded the youthful energy Leisure World residents exhibited,[65] one Newsweek writer suggested too much leisure weakened elderly minds. He mocked retirement villages as escapist, places where “reality and utopian fantasy merge in ‘an air of elegant euphoria.’”[66] Simultaneously, “old-age ghettos” was how a syndicated essay portrayed Leisure World and its ilk.[67] An Associated Press article, “Let’s Quit Working and Retire,” even chided the pre-70 retirees of Leisure World and similar developments for slacking in their duty to enrich the American economy.[68]

1995 Flood

A flood control channel that traverses Leisure World Seal Beach overflowed in the wake of a 5-inch rainstorm on January 4, 1995. Approximately 170 Leisure World units were declared uninhabitable, and 200 more suffered some water damage. The amphitheater filled with 10 feet of water, while the basement of the Redeemer Lutheran Church held 12 feet of water. Seal Beach's mayor estimated the flood caused $2 million in damages.[69]

HOA Law

Leisure World Seal Beach's pioneering role in introducing cooperative community governance to California led it to be a party in two important lawsuits that helped establish the state's homeowner association (HOA) regulations.

Golden Rain Foundation v. Leisure World Foundation (1965-1966)

To assure creditors for the Seal Beach development would be paid, the FHA advocated continued professional management of Leisure World. As community fees rose to pay for the Leisure World medical plan, an often-bitter series of public meetings erupted pitting residents against management.[70] According to court documents, “a local city official” suggested to GRF's executive director “that it might be well to conduct an investigation” of Lloyd Gummere,[71] the leader of the residents’ protest group who was also a candidate for the Seal Beach city council.[72] When two private detectives were arrested for wiretapping Gummere's phone, an active revolt began.[73] After a dissident slate of candidates unseated the 1963-64 GRF board, that incumbent board bound the 1964-65 board to a management agreement with a Cortese-affiliated company.[74] Some shareholders suggested the decision ceding control to Cortese's now-multi-community management company weakened the developers’ original promise that “residents will formulate the policies of the community.”[75] Although facing vigorous opposition from the FHA,[76] the new GRF board sued Cortese. In October 1966, the court voided ties with Cortese's management company, allowing the GRF board to make fundamental decisions about managing the community.[77]

Golden Rain Foundation v. Carol Franz (2004-2008)

A group of shareholders petitioned for access to GRF board documents under California regulations governing HOAs. GRF asserted that because GRF owned no residences, it was not an HOA, but a management company under contract to the home-owning mutuals. In a series of cases ending at the California Court of Appeals, GRF's structure, which GRF's expert witness testified was “unique” within the United States, was ruled to be an HOA and subject to all relevant provisions.[78]

Demographics

In 2019, 9,595 people, with an average age of 74, lived in Leisure World Seal Beach. Slightly more than 60 percent were female. Thirty-three percent of the community's population was over 80. Fifty-one residents were aged 100 or more.[79] The population density of the development's 531 acres is 11,560 people per square mile.[80]

Attractions

The Leisure World Globe, located at the development's Seal Beach Boulevard entrance, is one of the nation's largest globes.[81] Cortese wanted his new development to attract attention and remembered the 50-foot Globe-A-Drome in the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition’s midway.[82] Frustrated in his attempt to buy the original, he commissioned a 32-foot-tall, 14-ton rotating structure that originally was surrounded by fountains.[83] The Leisure World globe is frequently thought to be modeled on the 1964 New York World’s Fair Unisphere,[84] but it was completed months before the Unisphere’s plans were unveiled.[85] The Leisure World globe is the only free-standing sculptural piece listed among “Orange County’s 125 Icons” during the county's 125th anniversary.[86] It was refurbished in 2016.[87]

The Leisure World Amphitheater is a 2,500-seat outdoor performance space that hosts community gatherings and performances, and national entertainers. Its proscenium, stage and pit closely replicate the Hollywood Bowl’s first permanent structure, which opened in July 1922.[88]

The Leisure World Historical Society Museum, a display of artifacts, photographs and documents, displayed in the first-built Leisure World clubhouse. The development’s historical archives are now located at the University of California, Irvine.

A bronze statue of a ballerina, Premiere Danseuse Etoile,[89] by noted Italian sculptor Pino Conte (1915-1997), is mounted at the entrance to Leisure World Seal Beach’s Administration Building. Now referred to within the community as “Twiggy,” it was a 1963 gift to the community from the Corteses.

Located within a 3-mile radius of Leisure World

California State University, Long Beach

  • Carolyn Campagna Kleefeld Contemporary Art Museum
  • Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden
  • Carpenter Arts Center - The Carpenters’ memorabilia are exhibited in this concert hall
  • Walter Pyramid – 18-story CSULB arena is one of the United States’ three true pyramids

Joint Forces Training Base – Los Alamitos

Seal Beach Pier

Long Beach Marina: U.S.’s largest municipally-owned marina system, with 3,600 slips[90]

Rancho Los Alamitos – In the 1850s, this was headquarters for the largest U.S. cattle ranch. Early 19th century buildings and Frederick Law Olmsted Jr.-designed gardens are open for tours.

Seal Beach Municipal Pier – at 1,835 feet, California’s second-longest wooden pier[91]

San Gabriel River Trail – 35-mile trail from Azusa to Seal Beach passes alongside the community

Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge

U.S. Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach

  • World War II National Submarine Memorial – West

In 1964, ABC’s Queen for a Day broadcast an entire show dedicated to women in Leisure World. At the show’s conclusion, host Jack Bailey granted that day’s winner, Leisure World resident Mabel Menke, with her wish for a new tricycle.[92]

In 1986, an episode of NBC’s Highway to Heaven, starring and directed by Michael Landon, was filmed at Leisure World Seal Beach. The episode, titled “Love at Second Sight,” premiered Nov. 6, 1986, in the series’ third season.[93]

Future U.S. presidents Richard Nixon,[94] Ronald Reagan[95] and George H.W. Bush[96] spoke at Leisure World during campaign events. Future presidential candidate, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Dole, campaigned in Leisure World for her spouse, United States Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, during his 1996 presidential campaign.[97]

The 2,500-seat amphitheater hosts a summer concert series.

Leisure World Seal Beach's proximity to Los Angeles assured its summer amphitheater concerts often had star lineups. The weekly events have featured singers Debbie Reynolds, Rosemary Clooney, Kathryn Grayson, Pat Boone, Glen Campbell, Anita O’Day, Tony Martin, Buddy Greco, Frankie Avalon, John Davidson and Frankie Laine; and the bands or orchestras of Harry James, Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa, Les Brown, Nelson Riddle and Lawrence Welk. Prominent small groups included The Mills Brothers, The Ink Spots, The Lettermen, The Kingston Trio, The Four Freshmen, The Coasters, The Lennon Sisters, and The Diamonds. Among the actors who appeared at the Amphitheater were Mickey Rooney, Dorothy Lamour, Buddy Ebsen, Nanette Fabray, Martha Raye, Florence Henderson and Sally Kellerman.[98][99]

Recognition

Notable People

  • Cecile Belle Adam, (1881-1977): After completing post-graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin, Adam published the novel, Red of the Dawn, in 1937.[109]
  • Alice B. Addenbrooke, (1881-1972): Led fundraising and supervised restoration to save two National Register of Historic Places properties: Nevada's Bowers Mansion and Fort Churchill State Historic Park, and wrote a book about each.[110]
  • Don Albin Alford, (1897-1973): Plowed the fortune he made in the 1921 Signal Hill oil strike into founding and publishing The Independent newspaper, one of the precursors to today’s Long Beach Press-Telegram.[111]
  • Tom Amberry, (1922-2017): At age 71, made 2,750 consecutive basketball free throws to set a Guinness World Record.
  • William W. Biddle, (1900-1973): Academic social scientist, he made important early steps in studying the psychological effects of propaganda and later altered the study of community development.[112]
  • Loureide J. Biddle, (1902-1996): An Earlham College professor, she co-wrote The Community Development Process with her husband, William W. Biddle.[113]
  • Dee Booher, (1948-2022): Athlete and actor, she skated in professional roller derby before joining the initial cast of Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling (G.L.O.W.) as “Matilda the Hun.” She guest hosted The Gong Show 14 times and appeared in Married... with Children and Night Court.[114]
  • Ruby Frazier Coppedge, (1892-1970): As Ruby Frazier Frey, she wrote the best-selling 1946 historical novel, "Red Morning," relating the story of her ancestor, Jane Frazier, and her colonial-era capture by the Delaware Tribe, her escape and several-hundred-mile wilderness trek to return to her family.[115]
  • Richard C. Currier, (1893-1984): Editing department head at the Hal Roach Studios from 1920 to 1932, he worked on nearly every Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang comedy. During his 39-year career in movies and television, he logged over 400 editing and directing credits.[116]
  • Earl Stanfield Fullbrook, (1883-1964): University of Nebraska dean of business, he also served as the National Collegiate Athletic Association's secretary/treasurer. The University of Nebraska annually presents the Fullbrook Award for marketing studies.[117]
  • Anton Grot (1884-1974): A five-time Academy Award nominee for art direction, Grot was credited with creating the classic 1930s Warner Bros.'s signature look. He is a member of the Art Directors Guild Hall of Fame.[118]
  • Luella J. Hall, (1891-1973): After receiving a doctorate in history from Stanford University and completing a 40-year teaching career, Hall published a 1,114-page tome, The United States and Morocco, 1776-1956, shortly before her death.[119]
  • Joseph J. Healy, (1926-2019): 1970s CEO of Flying Tiger Line, the world's largest air cargo carrier prior to the airline's purchase by Federal Express Corporation.[120]
  • Luke I.C. Kim, (1930-2015): Founding president of the Association of Korean-American Psychiatrists, he was considered a major figure in introducing how cultural factors influence the treatment of mental illness among Asians.[121]
  • Mary F. Lindsley, (1907-1997): A creative writing professor at New York City's Hunter College for 41 years, she published over 15 books of fiction, poetry and plays. Also wrote as Mary L. Jaffee.[122]
  • Joseph Longfield, (1890-1975): Mayor of Hanford, California, the city's community center is named after him.[123]
  • Sherman Lowe, (1894-1968): Screenwriter for Hollywood westerns, adventures, musicals and spy films, he contributed to many serials, including The Cisco Kid, Frank Buck's Jungle Menace, The Green Hornet Strikes Again! and Captain Video: Master of the Stratosphere.[124]
  • Buddy McDonald, (1922-2008): One of the Our Gang child actors in the early 1930s, as a recovered alcoholic he founded several rehabilitation centers that pioneered "best of practice" techniques for treating addictions.[125]
  • Kate Pedigo, (1911-2016): A folk-art painter who wrote and published books in three different genres after her 80th birthday.[126]
  • Alvin P. Pierson, (1898-1975): Finance professor at California State-Fullerton for 27 years, he was a Fulbright Program professor in Iraq and served as the university's interim head football coach for two years.[127]
  • Francis B. Settle, M.D., (1891-1975): A founding member in 1937 of the American Board of Surgery, the group helped established certification procedures to distinguish surgery as a specialty practice apart from general practitioners.[128]

References

  1. Peterson, Robert (October 2, 1961). "Largest Housing Project for Seniors". The Hanford Sentinel. p. 12.
  2. "Destination for the Ageless Generation". leisureworld.com. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  3. "Alona Cortese, 97; Co-Developer of Leisure World". The Register. Santa Ana, California. April 23, 2006.
  4. "Alona Marlowe". imdb.com. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  5. Strawther, Larry (2012). A Brief History of Los Alamitos and Rossmoor. Charleston, SC: The History Press. pp. 130–131. ISBN 978-1609498610.
  6. Baker, Terry (July–August 2009). Ring, Bob (ed.). "The History of Leisure World 1963-1975" (PDF). The Historian. Historical Society of Laguna Woods. 3 (4): 3. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  7. "Hidden Communities: Mid-Century Modern Homes in Orange County". Mid-Century Modern Real Estate. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  8. "Big Crowds See Frematic Homes". Independent-Press-Dispatch. Long Beach, CA. September 25, 1955. p. C6.
  9. (5)
  10. "Rossmoor Leisure World" (film). sealbeachleisureworldhistory.org. Rossmoor Corporation. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  11. Strawther, Larry (2014). Seal Beach: A Short History. Charleston, SC: The History Press. pp. 166–170. ISBN 978-1626194892.
  12. "USC, Edison Both Honor Ross Cortese". Independent-Press-Dispatch. Long Beach, California. March 14, 1965. p. R7.
  13. Belman, Orli (March 29, 2018). "USC Leonard Davis School Honors the Legacy of Ross Cortese". USC Leonard School of Gerontology.
  14. "Alona Cortese Elder Law Center". chapman.edu. Chapman University. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  15. "Sellout of Community Tribute to Developer". The Los Angeles Times. May 7, 1961. p. C14.
  16. (11 ), p. 166
  17. Dorsey, John (1965). "A New Life" (film). sealbeachleisureworldhistory.org. Rossmoor Corporation. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  18. "Elderly Housing Calls for Non-Profit Medicare". Santa Rosa (CA) Press Democrat. March 21, 1962. p. 33.
  19. "Retirement Colony Includes Medical Care in Home Price". San Gabriel Valley Tribune. Corona, California. United Press International. June 30, 1963.
  20. "US Inflation Calculator". www.bis-gov. Census Bureau. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  21. Aron, Doris (May 30, 1981). "Rossmoor Liquidates: Grand Finale for a Bravura Performance". The Washington Post.
  22. (6 )
  23. (6) p.5
  24. "Carefree co-ops - to answer retirement's special needs". American Builder. Chicago: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corp. May 1963.
  25. (6) p.6
  26. "Building Permits Up in Seal Beach". Independent. Long Beach, California. July 6, 1961. p. B6.
  27. Kopetman, Roberta (June 23, 2012). "Leisure World celebrates 50th Today". The Orange County Register. Santa Ana, California.
  28. "1971: Ross Cortese Redefines How Senior Citizens Live". The Orange County Register. Santa Ana, California. November 25, 2005.
  29. "Nation Responds to World of Leisure". Herald-Examiner. Los Angeles, California. June 16, 1963.
  30. "Rossmoor Leisure World Sets '63 Ad Budget". Advertising Age. December 13, 1962.
  31. "J. Edgar Hoover Foundation Board of Directors". www.jedgarhooverfoundation.org/directors.asp. The J. Edgar Hoover Foundation. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  32. (6)
  33. Orli, Belman (March 29, 2018). "USC Leonard Davis School Honors the Legacy of Ross Cortese". USC Leonard School of Gerontology. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  34. Lewis, Dick (January 21, 1962). "A Leisure World's Medical Plan". Southland Magazine. Independent-Press-Telegram. pp. 8, 22.
  35. "Tenants to Get Doctor Care in Combined House Payment". Press-Telegraph. Long Beach, California. June 28, 1961. p. B1.
  36. Mulcahy, Frank (October 29, 1961). "Unique City Opening Today". The Los Angeles Times. p. J1.
  37. "Crowds Attend Opening of New Retirement City". The Los Angeles Times. November 5, 1961. p. J8.
  38. "RLW Records Peak Month". Rossmoor Leisure World News. March 1963. pp. 1–2.
  39. Rossmoor Leisure World: A New Way of Life. Rossmoor Corporation. 1963. p. 10.
  40. Ray, Bill (November 8, 1963). "Widening World of Retirement Towns". Life. pp. 93–98, 100, 102.
  41. "U.S. GNI Per-Capita 1960-2021". macrotrends.net. Macrotrends. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  42. "Senior Citizens Move Into Leisure World". Independent-Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. June 9, 1962. p. A3.
  43. "Nation Responds to World of Leisure". Herald-Examiner. Los Angeles, California. June 16, 1963.
  44. "RLW Records Peak Month". Rossmoor Leisure World News. No. 1. Seal Beach, California: Golden Rain Foundation. March 1963. pp. 1–2.
  45. "Final Unit Near Sellout in Leisure World 'City'". Independent-Press-Dispatch. Long Beach, California. November 15, 1964.
  46. Washburn, Larry (August 20, 1961). "Senior Project Looks Utopian". Independent Star-News. Pasadena, California. p. B1.
  47. "Medical Care Offered by Beach Colony". Brawley (CA) News. July 1, 1963.
  48. "6750 Homes Planned for Senior Citizens". The Tidings. Los Angeles, California. July 28, 1961. p. 5. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  49. "Name Medical Head for Leisure World". Independent-Press-Dispatch. Long Beach, California. September 24, 1961. p. R1. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  50. Zinser, Ben (April 1, 1963). "Elderly Residents Aid Research". Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. p. B2. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  51. "Head Speaks at Leisure World". Seal Beach News. July 5, 1963.
  52. "Area Hosts Salinger Talks Today". Independent. Long Beach, California. April 27, 1964. p. A3.
  53. Sutton, Charles (August 19, 1964). "Rossmoor's New Chief Takes Over". Independent. Long Beach, California. p. B1. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  54. Moorman, Vera (June 30, 1963). "Leisure World Offers Unusual Medical Plan". The Orange County Register. Santa Ana, California.
  55. Sutton, Charles (October 17, 1963). "'Leisure World' Medical Aid Program Source of Worry". Independent. Long Beach, California. p. B8. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  56. Sutton, Charles (November 1, 1963). "Leisure World Will Charge Medical Fees". Independent. Long Beach, California. p. B2. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  57. (54)
  58. Sutton, Charles (March 14, 1964). "Leisure World Manager Assails Recall Promoters". Independent. Long Beach, California. p. B4. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  59. "Timeline". sealbeachleisureworldhistory.org. Seal Beach Leisure World Historical Society. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  60. Loar, Russ (July 12, 1995). "$35,000 from Leisure World Caps Library Deal". The Los Angeles Times. p. B3. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  61. "2019-2020 Annual Report" (PDF). lwsb.com. Golden Rain Foundation. p. 113. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  62. "Huge Seniors' Project Nearing Sellout Stage". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. September 22, 1963. p. J11. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  63. (58)
  64. "Golden Age Foundation". Golden Age Foundation. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  65. (40)
  66. "Old Folks at Home". The Emporia (KS) Gazette. March 20, 1963. p. 2. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  67. "Retirement Cities' Newest Boom in California". The York (PA) Dispatch. November 4, 1963. p. 17. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  68. Barnes, Bob (February 3, 1963). "Life Begins at 50 - Let's Quit Working and Retire". The Sunday Press. Binghamton, NY. Associated Press. p. C16. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  69. Hernandez, Greg (January 6, 1995). "Flooding Wreaks Havoc at Leisure World in Seal Beach". The Los Angeles Times. pp. A1, A20. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  70. (58)
  71. Kerrigan, J. (March 7, 1966). "People v. Potter". Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  72. "Seal Beach Council Seat for Gummere". Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. June 3, 1964. p. B1. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  73. Sutton, Larry (March 15, 1964). "Leisure World Wiretap Charge". Independent-Press-Dispatch. Long Beach, California. pp. A1, A8. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  74. Sutton, Charles (June 2, 1964). "New Controversy at Leisure World". Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. p. B2. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  75. "Second Unit of Leisure World Sold Out; Third Unit to Open". Independent-Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. April 15, 1962. p. R8. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  76. Davidson, Bill (January 16, 1965). "Thistles in Paradise". Saturday Evening Post. pp. 19–25.
  77. "Leisure World Residents Given Approval to Manage Housing". The Los Angeles Times. October 2, 1966. p. R5. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  78. "Leisure World Resident Win Legal Battle to See Books". The Orange County Register. June 20, 2008.
  79. Fabian, Daniel (November 14, 2019). "Demographics of Leisure World Seal Beach" (PDF). lwsb.com. Golden Rain Foundation. pp. 17–18. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  80. "Real Trust Property Acreage". lwsb.com. Golden Rain Foundation. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  81. Seltzer, Debra Jane. "Giant Globes". RoadsideArchitecture.com. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  82. Tilden, Gladys, ed. (1939). Official Guide Book: Golden Gate International Exposition (1st ed.). San Francisco: Crocker Company. p. 95. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  83. "Work Progressing on Leisure World". Independent-Press-Telegram. Long Beach, California. October 8, 1961. p. R6. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  84. (78)
  85. Rogers, Adam (June 2017). "What the Unisphere Tells Us About America at the Dawn of the Space Age". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  86. "125 Iconic People, Places and Things That Represent Orange County for its 125th Birthday" (PDF). ocgov.com. Orange County Board of Supervisors. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  87. Goulding, Susan Christian (October 7, 2016). "Leisure World Unveils Earth-Toned Globe". The Orange County Register. Santa Ana, California.
  88. "The Hollywood Bowl". waterandpower.org. Water and Power Associates. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  89. Dixon, Gail (April 2021). Premiere Danseuse Etoile. Laguna Woods, California: Laguna Woods History Center. p. 1.
  90. "Welcome to Parks, Recreation and Marine". longbeach.gov. City of Long Beach. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  91. "California Pier Facts and Figures". seecalifornia.com. See California. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  92. Conklin, Tom (February 27, 1964). "A Queen We Know". The Nashua (IA) Reporter. p. 8. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  93. Newhouse, Margaret (September 6, 1986). "Michael Landon Series to Film Segment Here". Leisure World News. Seal Beach, California. p. 2.
  94. "Nixon Gives Talks at 4 Receptions". Independent. Long Beach, California. March 24, 1962. p. A4. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  95. "Ronald Reagan Greets Crowd at Leisure World" (photo). gettyimages.com. October 13, 1980. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  96. Johnson, Cynthia (October 1, 1984). "Vice Pres. George Bush at a Campaign Rally for Seniors". gettyimages.com. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  97. Miller, Martin (July 4, 1996). "Elizabeth Dole Gets Warm Reception at Leisure World". The Los Angeles Times. p. B6. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  98. Thayer, Kathy (March 2, 2021). Famous Performers at the Amphitheater. Seal Beach, California: Golden Rain Foundation. p. 1.
  99. "Videos". sealbeachleisureworldhistory.org. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  100. (28)
  101. Folkart, Burt A. (October 31, 1991). "Leisure World Builder Ross Cortese Dies at 74". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  102. (3)
  103. Maranjian, Selena (April 27, 2017). "The 7 Most Popular Retirement Destinations for Seniors". foxbusiness.com. The Motley Fool. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  104. "TimesOC's 2019 Readers' Choice Awards highlights Orange County Favorites". The Los Angeles Times. November 11, 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  105. "Best of Times OC". The Los Angeles Times. November 15, 2020. p. 55.
  106. "Best of the Southland". The Los Angeles Times. July 26, 2022. p. T16.
  107. Ventiera, Sara (June 29, 2020). "Catch the Silver Wave! America's Most Affordable Beach Towns for Retirement". www.realtor.com. National Association of Realtors. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  108. Fulcher, Jim (June 5, 2022). "10 Most Affordable Beach Towns to Buy a Home". travelawaits.com. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  109. "Mrs. Adam service scheduled". Long Beach, California: Press-Telegram. June 23, 1977. pp. B6. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  110. Kitty Falcone (March 3, 2021). "Alice Merriam Baltzelle Addenbrooke". Nevada Women's History Project. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
  111. "D. Alford, 75, Dies; Oilman and Publisher". newspapers.com. Long Beach, California: The Independent. February 24, 1973. p. B3. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  112. "East is Forum Subject". Leisure World Weekly. Seal Beach, California. February 11, 1971. p. 2. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  113. "New General Catalog of Old Books and Authors". authorandbookinfo.com. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  114. "Dee Booher". imdb.com. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  115. "Author Ruby Coppedge, 78, Succumbs in Indianapolis". Logansport, Indiana: The Logansport Press. March 10, 1970. p. 2. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  116. "Richard C. Currier". imdb.com. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  117. "Educator Fullbrook Dies at 71". Long Beach, California: Press-Telegram. June 22, 1964. p. B2. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  118. "Anton Grot". imdb.com. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  119. "Luella Hall". Palo Alto Times. Palo Alto, California. July 4, 1973. p. 18.
  120. Grapp, Wesley G. (March 20, 1989). "Records and Briefs: B042395, Answer / Opposition to Petition for Writ". GoogleBooks. California Court of Appeal (2nd Appellate District). p. 22. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  121. "History". Association of Korean American Psychiatrists. AKAP. 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  122. Reginald, Robert (1979). Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature: A Checklist, 1700-1974: Volume 2. Detroit: Gale Research Company. p. 950. ISBN 0810372495.
  123. "Former Mayor is Dead". Hanford, California: The Hanford Sentinel. August 4, 1975. p. 2. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  124. "Sherman L. Lowe". imdb.com. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  125. "Co-founder of drug and alcohol treatment group". Los Angeles Times. September 26, 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  126. "Author Search". lwsb.com. LW Library. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  127. "Former FSU Professor Dies". Fresno, California: The Fresno Bee. January 14, 1975. p. D5. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  128. "Dr. Settle services to be private". Long Beach, California: Press-Telegram. February 28, 1975. p. B4. Retrieved 5 November 2022.

33°46′3.85″N 118°4′40.10″W / 33.7677361°N 118.0778056°W / 33.7677361; -118.0778056

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.