
The ink had barely dried on official documents renaming and rechartering the Women’s Civic Club as our Solana Beach Civic & Historical Society in 1989 when then-Board members charged ahead with plans to transform a deteriorating 100-year-old home into our Heritage Museum. Although the structure — the former Stevens house, built in 1888 — had been identified and promised for the purpose of creating a museum, a few challenges remained. Among them: Where to put it? And how to get it there?
The City had agreed to assume ownership and committed $25,000 for exterior renovation, but there was no consensus about where to place the planned museum. As many as eight locations were under consideration, including Skyline School, several undeveloped acres in residential neighborhoods, and the 16-acre property then used as a flower farm at the north end of North Rios Ave. From the start, City staff and Park and Recreations Committee members advocated for siting the planned museum on City-owned land. They
eventually prevailed in 1991 when Council approved a proposal to move the old house to La Colonia Park.
Now it was up to the Society to fund the $4,000 cost of the move. Help came with a $1,000 donation from Bruce Howe, a former resident of the house, whose family owned it from 1979 to 1984.
On Friday, February 22, 1991, starting at 9 a.m., the historic house was loaded on a flatbed truck for the mile-long journey from Del Mar Downs Road to Via de la Valle, then to Valley Avenue and the east side of the park.
Over time, the City took on exterior renovations, including a foundation, painting and a porch that wrapped around one of two eucalyptus trees preserved on site. Volunteers helped install the new roof, which also accommodated the tree, and began to
refurbish the interior. The work took years. It wasn’t until September, 17, 1994, that our Heritage Museum was formally dedicated and began opening for visitors.
It was another decade before the interior displays were completed to tell a story about the history of our City.