
At-Large Board Member Doug Wu
Get Involved with Your Community
By Doug Wu
If you’ve lived in the Concord area for some time, there is no better way to get involved with your community than becoming a participating member of the Concord Historical Society. That’s what I decided to do after moving back home to Pleasant Hill after living 8 years in Girdwood, Alaska.
As I grew up in the bay area as the 1st generation born in the US to a Chinese family, it was easy to feel disconnected from the people around me, as well as from my heritage. Having no sense of roots and looking for adventure I left for Alaska in 2001. Living in a small Alaska town for 8 years you quickly develop a deep sense of community – something that I thought didn’t exist in suburban California.
My father purchased one of Concord’s historical homes, the Kelly House in 1987, where my office is today. CHS operated their museum here for years, and my father was a regular supporter. His passing away in 2005 had a lot to do with my decision to return to California, something I really wasn’t looking forward to at the time.
Now I look around me, and some of the kids I knew from high school are still around but all grown up – and vested community members at that – school teachers, coaches, professionals, you name it. And what do we often do when we get together? Talk about the good ole days. Well, give it another 20 years and that’ll be history. History binds together and provides continuity across generations and cultures to create community. And I definitely feel much better about myself the day after a CHS event than hanging out with my old drinking buddies.
History can be exciting too, as I found out at the recent annual dinner meeting held at the Oakhurst Country Club. We learned about Tiburcio Vásquez, a womanizing, smooth talking, handsome bandido, who declared his new occupation as an outlaw after he and his fellow Californios became disenfranchised with the new American government and the loss of their economic, political, and social clout. Tiburcio became a folk hero to his people. I wonder what Señor Vásquez would think of California today?
Local history provides us value in different ways. We can learn from both the follies and wisdom of the past – “Preserving the Past to Protect the Future”. It creates a context of understanding the world around, and closest, to us. And it can be just plain fun and entertaining at times. That was my experience at my first board meeting tonight – work was accomplished and motions were carried but I often found myself smiling and laughing with others to the little stories of the past that were interjected into the meeting.
What surprised me the most was the different members who came up to me and told me they knew my father, and had nice things to say about him. It was not what they said that surprised me, but my reaction. In an instant those few kind words created a bridge between generations and cultures, and in a sense was like telling me, “This is your home, this is where your family chose to root, and through your family you are connected to people that previously you may never knew existed.” So in a very real sense, I am carrying on my father’s legacy.
As much as I love and miss Alaska, there truly is no place like home. There is no other place in the world where I could have these experiences. So I challenge you all to dig deeper into your community roots. If you have the opportunity, talk to your parents and elders about the past. Pickup a book on local history from the CHS resource center. Visit our website, www.concordhistory.com, and learn about your local history. Just telling about us to others or sharing this newsletter with a friend is a good start.
If you like what you see and want to participate further, I encourage you all to get involved with CHS – become a member if you aren’t already, volunteer, come to a function, make a donation in cash or product/services, or just come hang out with the “new young guy.” Supporting CHS is like saying, “Yes, we are part of community too and appreciate your part in preserving and sharing our local history.”
Note: Concord Historical Society’s annual Summer Social, to be held at the Galindo house, a restoration-in-progress project funded by the Concord Historical Society, is this Sunday, June 26th, a perfect opportunity for you to get involved with your community!
Doug Wu operates West Coast Digital Gurus, a technical training, consulting, and services business based in the Concord Kelly House.




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