Opportunity of a (City’s) Lifetime

Milpitas Cultural Timeline:
1954–present (City of Milpitas)

by Steve Munzel, President,
Milpitas Historical Society, May 7, 2011

Milpitas is poised at a very important point in our history. For the first time, our city purchased land for use as a park. What will be done with that new parkland on Main Street is now being decided.

Generally, our neighborhood parks are all cut from the same mold: there are tot lot play areas, barbecue pits, picnic tables, and areas for ball sports. These features attract and serve a particular demographic segment of our community that is mostly young and physically active.

This new Main St. Park is 1.6 acres located next to a senior housing facility, a medical clinic, railroad tracks, and our wonderful public library. The housing development that is located behind high walls just west of the new parkland already has play equipment and picnic areas in a well-maintained park.

Main Street Park is Appropriate Location for Community Museum

In particular, a small museum is appropriate for the park, not only as a central repository for artifacts from our vanished agricultural past, but as a place where our citizens and visitors can discover how different cultures came to Milpitas and contributed to making our city. Fortunately, support for a community museum is growing.

The Milpitas Historical Society has joined with the PRCRC in favor of locating a community museum in the

Laaguna SchoolLaaguna School

new park. The Historical Society has even offered, at no cost to the city, to furnish and staff the museum.

Historic Laguna School Offered to House Community Museum

The last one-room, wooden school house in the county, Laguna School, has generously been offered free to the city by its owner, Bill Hare (who recently won two Grammy Awards) for use as a community museum. Laguna School was built in 1865. Its first students used the chalkboard still hanging on its walls when Lincoln was president and the Civil War was raging. It would become the oldest museum structure in the South Bay if our city council agrees to accept Mr. Hare’s philanthropic gift and to invest in moving it to the Main St. Park.

Since the previous use of the parkland was as a commercial business, the sewer and water infrastructure is already in place for a museum. The building itself is free, a local group has offered to maintain it for free, there is already a parking garage just a few feet away, and there seems to be growing, broad support for a museum from so many community members, — so when will there be a better time to act?

Right now we see the best and cheapest opportunity for Milpitas – the only city town in Santa Clara County without a museum – to have one of the most historic structures in the county and the state as our own community museum and to put it right next door to the finest library around.

To be sure, it will not be without cost, but considering that the price of a single tot lot playground can run $3 million, by not building one of those in Main St. Park, the City should be able to save enough money to provide ample funds for a small, one-room museum

Please join with the rest of our community to encourage our friends and neighbors on the city council to let us all have a museum of our own.

Milpitas Community Museum Needs You!

The Milpitas Community Museum (MCM) has been successfully raising start-up funds. Now MCM is ready for more persons who are interested in becoming Trustees and Directors. This is a wonderful opportunity for you to become involved in the historic founding of our city’s first museum. Our first goal is to apply for non-profit corporation status with the State of California.

If you are interested in attending the next MCM Board of Directors meeting, contact Steve Munzel, current President of the Board of Trustees and Chairperson of the Board of Directors of The Milpitas Community Museum.

by mhs June 2, 2012