header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
April 26
1906 - Bobby Batugo, World Champion Mixologist in the 1970s, born in The Philippines [story]
Bobby Batugo


Bobbie Trueblood Davis at an SCV Boys & Girls Club Auction at CalArts

Before there was a city of Santa Clarita, there was Bobbie Trueblood Davis.

She was a force unto her own.

With her family by her side, “Bobbie” died Saturday, December 16, 2017, at home in Morro Bay, where she retired with her late husband – former LAPD chief and state Sen. Ed Davis – after more than half a century as an influential participant in the social and political fabric of the Santa Clarita Valley. She was 93.

It was an uncharacteristically quiet end to a transformative epoch in Santa Clarita Valley history.

“Mrs. Republican,” as she was known here, actually hailed from the south coast of England where she was born Oct. 30, 1924, as Aileen Nash. She never used her real first name. According to a 1996 biography by her good friend from the other side of the political aisle, the late Ruth Newhall, Bobbie’s father expected a boy and went to the hospital looking for his “little Bobby.” It stuck.

Bobbie was a war bride. In England she met a U.S. soldier named Fred Trueblood Jr., son of the owner-editor of the Newhall Signal and Saugus Enterprise, a little weekly paper in a little town north of Los Angeles that had no stoplights but quite a number of oil workers and bomb makers.

Truebloods were Democrats back then, but that fact didn’t stop Bobbie from registering as a Republican as soon as her citizenship came through. Her family back home was with Winston Churchill’s Conservative Party, and she’d never dream of going “Labour,” as Newhall notes.

Her beau’s parents lived on a section of William S. Hart’s ranch in Newhall. (Today, the “Frew house” is the Hart Park headquarters building.) Bobbie arrived in June 1946, just in time for Hart to die. In July she and Fred married. That same month she was indoctrinated into Newhall life when she attended her first Fourth of July Parade. Later she helped organize the parades.

There almost wasn’t a parade in 1955. The organizers couldn’t get it together that year. At Bobbie’s insistence, 14 of Newhall’s finest, including several Truebloods, grabbed flags and marched down what is now Main Street.

Funny story. Her “friends” insisted she carry the Union Jack, what with her being a Brit and all. Nobody could find one. But some wag came up with a relatively close approximation – a flag of the South – and they made her carry it. To this day, people wonder why the only known photo of the 1955 parade shows somebody carrying a Confederate flag. They thought nobody would know the difference. And they certainly couldn’t have predicted this “Internet” thing that has kept it in play.

The Signal, 7-6-1973

It was a virtual repeat in 1973 when July 4 fell on a Wednesday. The Chamber of Commerce wanted to move the Fourth of July Parade to the weekend, when the businesses were closed, and make it the Seventh or Eighth of July Parade. Bobbie would have none of it. The Fourth of July is the Fourth of July, darn it. On July 4, she marched down the street in what was thereafter known as “Bobbie’s parade.”

More correctly, she was carried.

“The centerpiece was Bobbie in a flowing white dress,” Newhall writes, “carried on high on a litter borne by six volunteer Rotarians and waving, on a single staff, the Stars and Stripes and England’s Union Jack” – the real Union Jack this time.

The Signal (then under Scott and Ruth Newhall’s ownership) made a big deal of it, and the message took. Three short years later, for the nation’s bicentennial, Jo Anne Darcy was in charge of the parade. Darcy’s parade on July 4, 1976, had more entries than the parade has seen since.

Of course, Bobbie was in that parade. Bobbie would participate in 50 consecutive Newhall Fourth of July Parades. Nobody comes close other than Montie Montana, and that was the Tournament of Roses Parade, not Newhall’s Fourth. Bobbie and Ruth Newhall were co-grand marshals in 1995.

~~~~~

After Bobbie and Fred wed, they bought a house in Bill Bonelli’s “Santa Clarita” housing tract in Dry Canyon, which was renamed Seco Canyon because someone thought it sounded better in Spanish.

They raised four children – Fred III, John, Michael and Kyltie – and sent them to Hart High. It was the town’s only high school at the time.

Bobbie’s father-in-law, Fred Trueblood Sr., died in 1960, and the family sold The Signal a couple of years later. Scott and Ruth Newhall bought it in 1963 and hired Bobbie to write the society column. She had written it previously, on a temporary basis, when her family owned the paper. She stayed with The Signal “until (Scott’s) attacks on her favorite politicians became too venomous to overlook,” Ruth writes.

Bobbie wasn’t just writing about the social scene – today we’d call it the nonprofit sector – she was living it. She was the first female president of the Newhall-Saugus Boys Club, which added girls in the early 1970s and became one of the first Boys and Girls Clubs in the United States. They made her “Man of the Year.”

Bobbie with Maureen Reagan, the president’s daughter

“Woman of the Year” was an appellation she received in 1972 from the Newhall-Saugus-Valencia Chamber of Commerce. (The NSV Chamber became the SCV Chamber in 1980, and the SCV Man and Woman of the Year awards were later transferred to an independent committee of past recipients.)

The previous year, in 1971, Bobbie became the first employee of Henry Mayo Newhall (then called Memorial) Hospital. The hospital board formed in 1970 and needed a director of community relations to spread the word about the planned hospital and organize support groups. Her intimacy with the local movers and shakers made Bobbie the ideal candidate. The hospital broke ground in 1972 and opened in 1975.

Bobbie was everywhere – everywhere a charity needed her to be. She helped get the Boys (and Girls) Club Benefit Auction off the ground in 1972 (still going strong). She presided over the first meeting in 1975 of the SCV Historical Society (still going strong). She is credited with naming St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Newhall – for another one of the organizers, Judy Stevens, a Hart High School math teacher. As for the spelling, there’s a St. Stephen but no St. Steven. (Still going strong.)

Ed and Bobbie Trueblood Davis

Meanwhile, she bolstered her Republican credentials both locally and professionally in a town that once voted Democrat but switched around 1970. She was a leader in the Republican Women’s Federated and other GOP clubs, and she represented Assemblyman Newt Russell and State Sen. Ed Reinecke as a field deputy.

Her husband of 33 years, Fred Trueblood Jr., died in April 1979.

In 1980 she latched onto local Assemblyman Bob Cline’s campaign for state senate. He lost. Ed Davis, the fiery ex-LAPD chief, won. In January 1981, Ed hired the woman with all of the local credentials – “Mrs. Republican” – to serve on his legislative staff. Three years later, they married.

Ed drove the car that carried Bobbie and Ruth in the 1995 parade.

“It was more comfortable than being carried in a litter, but maybe not quite so much fun,” Ruth remembered.

~~~~~

Bobbie Trueblood Davis is survived by her four children: Fred Trueblood III, John Trueblood, Michael Trueblood and Kyltie Trueblood; five grandchildren: Lisa Hothan, Holland Hothan, Danielle Hofing, Cielo Fromme and Edward Trueblood; three great-grandchildren: Amelia Fromme, Isobelle Fromme and Hunter Hothan; her brother, Ivor Nash, and his children, Kathryn Nash and Simon Nash.

A private service is being planned in the Morro Bay area.

 

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

5 Comments

  1. Jim Ventress says:

    Bobbie was so community minded. When I first came to the SCV in 1985 as the Executive Director of the Boys & Girls Club she was one of the people who helped shape the Annual Auction. She was also our first female Board President in 1975. We thank her for caring. May she Rest In Peace.

  2. Pat Willett says:

    Interesting that you use a photo of Bobbie with the baby elephant. If it’s the one I think it is, it was used in a telethon to support the Boys & Girls Club on the local cable TV channel. There aren’t enough paper towels in the world to mop up what that baby elephant did in our studio!!!

  3. Oscar Le Rouge says:

    You left out some relatives that survive her.
    Her grand daughter who cared for her for the last 4 years ’Brette’

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Friday, Apr 26, 2024
May 11: Placerita Canyon Nature Center Open House
The Placerita Canyon Nature Center Associates invite residents of the Santa Clarita Valley to the annual Placerita Canyon Nature Center Open House event to be held Saturday, May 11, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
TMU Biology Students Earn Recognition at Annual Research Conference
Earlier this month, a team of biology students at The Master’s University won a distinguished award at one of the oldest intercollegiate research conferences in the country.
Thursday, Apr 25, 2024
April 26-28: Community Weekend Returns to CalArts
California Institute of the Arts' Community Weekend kicks off on Friday, April 26 and runs through Sunday, April 28.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
The Placerita Canyon Nature Center Associates invite residents of the Santa Clarita Valley to the annual Placerita Canyon Nature Center Open House event to be held Saturday, May 11, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
May 11: Placerita Canyon Nature Center Open House
1906 - Bobby Batugo, World Champion Mixologist in the 1970s, born in The Philippines [story]
Bobby Batugo
Starting Monday, April 29, construction on the South Fork Trail will begin to replace a portion of the lodgepole fencing, the city of Santa Clarita announced.
South Fork Trail Construction to Begin April 29
College of the Canyons dual-sport athlete Sam Regez will continue his career at University of Portland with plans to run on both the cross country and track and field programs.
COC Standout Sam Regez Signs with University of Portland
An entertainment industry initiative to support the voices of California State University, Northridge film and TV students was celebrated with a recent screening of stories they created. 
‘Changing Lenses’ Initiative Lends Voice to CSUN Film, TV Students
How important is Film and Tourism to the Santa Clarita Valley Economy? 
SCVEDC Delves into Santa Clarita Film, Tourism Impact
Earlier this month, a team of biology students at The Master’s University won a distinguished award at one of the oldest intercollegiate research conferences in the country.
TMU Biology Students Earn Recognition at Annual Research Conference
Lisa Zamroz has announced her intent to step down as the head coach of The Master's University's women's basketball team effective July 1, 2024.
TMU Women’s Basketball Coach to Resign
Spring heralds a time of renewal and rejuvenation, not just in the natural world, but within our homes and lives as well.
Cameron Smyth | Spring Cleaning Your Neighborhood
College of the Canyons student-athletes Gigi Garcia (softball) and Hannes Yngve (men's golf) have been named the COC Athletic Department's Women's and Men's Student-Athletes of the Week for the period running April 15-20.
COC Names Gigi Garcia, Hannes Yngve Athletes of the Week
California Institute of the Arts' Community Weekend kicks off on Friday, April 26 and runs through Sunday, April 28.
April 26-28: Community Weekend Returns to CalArts
May is National Foster Parent Appreciation Month! Celebrate by applying to become a resource parent and fostering or foster-adopting siblings.
May 16: Children’s Bureau Foster Care Orientation
Santa Clarita resident Edina Lemus has been appointed Administrator of the Veterans Home of California in Lancaster by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.
Newsom Appoints SCV Resident Veterans Home Administrator
The California Department of Transportation has scheduled Lane Closures on the northbound and southbound State Route 14 between Technology Drive in Palmdale and Avenue A in Lancaster, closing up to three lanes.
Caltrans Announces SR-14 Lane Closures
1906 - Bercaw General Store opens in Surrey (Saugus) [story]
Bercaw Store
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond testified today in the Senate Education Committee about the need for results-proven training for all teachers of reading and math.
State Superintendent Makes Historic Push for Results-Proven Training in Literacy, Math as Sponsor of SB 1115
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health cautions residents who are planning to visit the below Los Angeles County beaches to avoid swimming, surfing, and playing in ocean waters:
Ocean Water Warning for April 24
Dust off the boots and get ready to holler, because Boots In The Park making its way to back to Santa Clarita, y’all. 
May 10: Boots In the Park Returns to Santa Clarita
State Senator Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita) and Supervisor Kathryn Barger honor the memory of those lost 109 years ago in Armenian Genocide. 
Barger, Wilk Recognize Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day
The Salvation Army Santa Clarita Valley Corps is excited to announce the inaugural Donut Day event.
June 7: Salvation Army SCV Announces Inaugural Donut Day Event
The Los Angeles County Animal Care Foundation has approved $370,000 in funding to support the Vet@ThePark program operated by the County of Los Angeles Department of Animal Care and Control.
LAC Animal Care Foundation Provides $370K Grant to Support Vet@ThePark
The California Department of Public Health is encouraging Californians to take part in National Prescription Drug Take Back Day on April 27.
CDPH Urges Californians to Support Prescription Drug Take Back Day
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a motion, introduced by Supervisor Kathryn Barger and co-authored by Board Chair Lindsey P. Horvath, proclaiming May 2024 as Mental Health Awareness Month in Los Angeles County.
Supes Proclaim May as Mental Health Awareness Month
The Grammy-award winning rock ‘n’ roll group Blues Traveler will take the stage of the Santa Clarita Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m. May 9. 
May 9: Blues Traveler to Perform at PAC
SCVNews.com