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(E) San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area's Croatians
http://www.croatia.org/crown/articles/4793/1/E-San-Pedro-Street-Renamed-in-Honor-of-Areas-Croatians.html
By Nenad N. Bach
Published on 09/28/2003
 

 

San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area'sCroatians


September 24, 2003 E-mail story Print
San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area's Croats

By Jessica Garrison, Times Staff Writer

The days when Balkan upheavals echoed in San Pedro's neighborhoods seem to be comfortably in the past, prompting Croats to turn their attention to getting civic recognition for their heritage.

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to name a portion of 9th Street in San Pedro "Croatian Place," and dozens of aging Croatian immigrants, along with Croatian Consul General Sanja Bujas Juraga, crowded into City Hall to celebrate the honor.

"So happy today for our street," said Antonija Rancic, 63, one of about 35,000 Croats who make the harbor area one of the largest Croatian communities in the United States. "Everybody be so proud."

Croats began immigrating to Los Angeles in great numbers at the end of the 19th century, fleeing the harsh regime of the Austro-Hungarian empire.

On San Pedro's bluffs, they found a landscape that resembled the sun-kissed islands and inlets of the Dalmatian Coast. And in the waters off the harbor, they fished as they had for generations in the crystal blue waves of the Adriatic Sea.

In many respects they were model immigrants — successful business people who sent their children to college, supported St. Anthony's Croatian Church and fell in love with America — while holding on to their taste for plum brandy, strong coffee and cigarettes.

But they could not escape the ethnic tensions that roiled their homeland.

Until the 1990s, Croatia was part of Yugoslavia, a Communist country that also included Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia and Kosovo. The government, headquartered in the Serbian city of Belgrade, made it a crime to sing Croatian songs or fly the Croatian flag, and many Croats believe Serbs were treated to nicer apartments and better jobs.

Halfway around the world in San Pedro, the community was split between those who called themselves Croats and those who referred to themselves as Yugoslavs, even if they were of Croatian descent, according to Josip Mardesic, a controller who also serves as president of the Croatian American Club.

Mardesic said that in the 1970s several Croat-owned stores in San Pedro were bombed, and he himself received a threatening letter. Some community members blame the Yugoslavian government, while others say the culprits' identities remain a mystery.

But tensions in San Pedro ran high, and played out at community events as well. A riot erupted at San Pedro's Daniel Field in the 1980s when the local Croatian team played the local Yugoslav team.

"There were Croatians who wanted a free Croatia, and others who saw unity within the Yugoslav nation," said Anthony Misetich, a former president of the Dalmatian-American Club, which used to be called the Yugoslav-American Club.

Yugoslavia's civil war brought the two Croatian factions together. In the 1990s, as Yugoslavia disintegrated and Serbia and Croatia fell into a bloody conflict, the Croats of San Pedro directed their anger toward Serbs. San Pedro's Yugoslav club dropped its rivalry with Mardesic's Croatian American club and changed its name to the Dalmatian Club. "No more Yugoslav," one Croatian man declared at the time.

Today, tempers have mellowed and civic boosterism is the focus.

But until this year, no street in San Pedro bore witness to the area's Croatian heritage. In July, Councilwoman Janice Hahn pushed a successful plan to change the name of a section of Palos Verdes Street to Ante Perkov Way after the recently deceased founder of San Pedro's best-known Croatian restaurant, Ante's.

This summer, Mardesic and other members of the Croatian American Club asked Hahn to rename a portion of the street in front of their club. When the change was announced Sunday at St. Anthony's Croatian Catholic Church, the staid congregation broke into applause.

"It feels great," Mardesic said. "This colony that has been here since 1800s, they have always been very humble, work hard, be productive and go home to their families, and that's all they ever ask for. To have a street named after them, it is great."

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
Click here for article licensing and reprint options

Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times

Source:http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-croatsep24,1,2045392.story?coll=laheadlines-california  

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A block-long stretch of Ninth Street in San Pedro was
renamed Croatian Place in honor of the community's century-old
Croatian/American community.

The City Council voted Tuesday to change the name of the street between
Grand Avenue and Gaffey Street. The ceremonial "Croatian Place" signs will
go up soon, but the street section officially will remain Ninth Street.

"Croatians were pioneers in San Pedro, going back to the late 1800s," said
Joe Mardesic, president of the Croatian American Club. "This gives some
recognition to this history."

Efforts for the street name change began about two years ago when club
members approached Councilwoman Janice Hahn with the request, said Vladimir
Lonza, past president of the San Pedro Croatian-American Club.

The street designation is a way to honor the historic Croatian-American
influence in San Pedro, said Lonza, who came to the United States in 1959.

"It's symbolic and special for us old-timers," Lonza said. "We're getting
older and some of us are passing away. This says, 'We were there.' Even if
the club disappears, it will be Croatian Place."

Source: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/6851287.htm


(E) San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area's Croatians

 

San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area'sCroatians


September 24, 2003 E-mail story Print
San Pedro Street Renamed in Honor of Area's Croats

By Jessica Garrison, Times Staff Writer

The days when Balkan upheavals echoed in San Pedro's neighborhoods seem to be comfortably in the past, prompting Croats to turn their attention to getting civic recognition for their heritage.

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to name a portion of 9th Street in San Pedro "Croatian Place," and dozens of aging Croatian immigrants, along with Croatian Consul General Sanja Bujas Juraga, crowded into City Hall to celebrate the honor.

"So happy today for our street," said Antonija Rancic, 63, one of about 35,000 Croats who make the harbor area one of the largest Croatian communities in the United States. "Everybody be so proud."

Croats began immigrating to Los Angeles in great numbers at the end of the 19th century, fleeing the harsh regime of the Austro-Hungarian empire.

On San Pedro's bluffs, they found a landscape that resembled the sun-kissed islands and inlets of the Dalmatian Coast. And in the waters off the harbor, they fished as they had for generations in the crystal blue waves of the Adriatic Sea.

In many respects they were model immigrants — successful business people who sent their children to college, supported St. Anthony's Croatian Church and fell in love with America — while holding on to their taste for plum brandy, strong coffee and cigarettes.

But they could not escape the ethnic tensions that roiled their homeland.

Until the 1990s, Croatia was part of Yugoslavia, a Communist country that also included Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia and Kosovo. The government, headquartered in the Serbian city of Belgrade, made it a crime to sing Croatian songs or fly the Croatian flag, and many Croats believe Serbs were treated to nicer apartments and better jobs.

Halfway around the world in San Pedro, the community was split between those who called themselves Croats and those who referred to themselves as Yugoslavs, even if they were of Croatian descent, according to Josip Mardesic, a controller who also serves as president of the Croatian American Club.

Mardesic said that in the 1970s several Croat-owned stores in San Pedro were bombed, and he himself received a threatening letter. Some community members blame the Yugoslavian government, while others say the culprits' identities remain a mystery.

But tensions in San Pedro ran high, and played out at community events as well. A riot erupted at San Pedro's Daniel Field in the 1980s when the local Croatian team played the local Yugoslav team.

"There were Croatians who wanted a free Croatia, and others who saw unity within the Yugoslav nation," said Anthony Misetich, a former president of the Dalmatian-American Club, which used to be called the Yugoslav-American Club.

Yugoslavia's civil war brought the two Croatian factions together. In the 1990s, as Yugoslavia disintegrated and Serbia and Croatia fell into a bloody conflict, the Croats of San Pedro directed their anger toward Serbs. San Pedro's Yugoslav club dropped its rivalry with Mardesic's Croatian American club and changed its name to the Dalmatian Club. "No more Yugoslav," one Croatian man declared at the time.

Today, tempers have mellowed and civic boosterism is the focus.

But until this year, no street in San Pedro bore witness to the area's Croatian heritage. In July, Councilwoman Janice Hahn pushed a successful plan to change the name of a section of Palos Verdes Street to Ante Perkov Way after the recently deceased founder of San Pedro's best-known Croatian restaurant, Ante's.

This summer, Mardesic and other members of the Croatian American Club asked Hahn to rename a portion of the street in front of their club. When the change was announced Sunday at St. Anthony's Croatian Catholic Church, the staid congregation broke into applause.

"It feels great," Mardesic said. "This colony that has been here since 1800s, they have always been very humble, work hard, be productive and go home to their families, and that's all they ever ask for. To have a street named after them, it is great."

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
Click here for article licensing and reprint options

Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times

Source:http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-croatsep24,1,2045392.story?coll=laheadlines-california  

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A block-long stretch of Ninth Street in San Pedro was
renamed Croatian Place in honor of the community's century-old
Croatian/American community.

The City Council voted Tuesday to change the name of the street between
Grand Avenue and Gaffey Street. The ceremonial "Croatian Place" signs will
go up soon, but the street section officially will remain Ninth Street.

"Croatians were pioneers in San Pedro, going back to the late 1800s," said
Joe Mardesic, president of the Croatian American Club. "This gives some
recognition to this history."

Efforts for the street name change began about two years ago when club
members approached Councilwoman Janice Hahn with the request, said Vladimir
Lonza, past president of the San Pedro Croatian-American Club.

The street designation is a way to honor the historic Croatian-American
influence in San Pedro, said Lonza, who came to the United States in 1959.

"It's symbolic and special for us old-timers," Lonza said. "We're getting
older and some of us are passing away. This says, 'We were there.' Even if
the club disappears, it will be Croatian Place."

Source: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/6851287.htm