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
November 26
1916 - A score of Wobblies bust up Newhall Jail after commandeering SP freight train [story]
Wobblies logo


Clyde Smyth tells some family history during a 2007 SCVTV program.

WATCH FUNERAL SERVICE: A Celebration of Life

 

Former Santa Clarita Mayor Clyde Smyth died peacefully Sunday night with his wife, Sue, at his bedside. Smyth suffered a massive stroke January 14, from which he did not recover.

Smyth’s son, Assemblyman Cameron Smyth, said that the family has been sustained by messages and support from the community, who have been sending tributes to them since news broke of the elder Smyth’s condition last week.

“It’s nice to hear from people that maybe we haven’t spoken to in a decade who heard about my dad; that’s the wonder of social media,” Smyth said. “I’ve received dozens of Facebook comments and posts from people who live all across the country who heard through their families and sent their support. It’s a nice reminder of the impact my dad had on this community.”

Funeral services are planned at 11 a.m. Saturday at Christ Lutheran Church, 25816 Tournament Road in Valencia, with interment at Eternal Valley Memorial Park immediately following. Both gatherings are open to the public.

“Clyde was one of the truly incredible leaders in the city’s history,” said Councilwoman and former mayor Laurene Weste. “He was a devoted man to his country, his family and community. He gave 100 percent of his life to making things better, to educating the youth of our valley and setting the strong precedent that we benefit from today, having the best education available in the state of California for our children.

“He was a truly caring man, who listened, cared and made good decisions for the greater good of all,” she continued. “Clyde was one of the fathers that really dedicated his time to making sure his sons carried forth the legacy of being good men, good leaders and good fathers.

Smyth spent a lifetime working with youth, committing himself to education at an early age, becoming a teacher, receiving his doctorate and eventually leading the William S. Hart High School District as Superintendent, from which he retired in 1997.

Twenty years ago, Smyth was named SCV Man of the Year for his many achievements.

A native of Pasadena, Hamilton Clyde Smyth served in the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict, received a doctorate in Education from Brigham Young University and worked in the Pasadena School district in the ’50s and ’60s, before becoming principal of Placerita Junior High School in 1969. Five years later, he was named Superintendent of the William S. Hart High School District, where he worked for 18 years.

He and Sue moved to Newhall in 1971, where they settled to raise their two sons. Sue became a teacher with the Newhall School District and the family became involved in the community. Over the years, Smyth was active with the Santa Clarita Valley Rotary Club, the Boy Scouts of America and the boards of Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital and the SCV Boys and Girls Club, where his philanthropic leadership helped both charities grow significantly.

Smyth earned a unique nickname, “Landslide Clyde” when he won a seat on the Santa Clarita City Council in 1994 by only 16 votes. It was the first election in city history where votes were recounted. He went on to serve as the city’s Mayor in 1997. Cameron followed his father into the political foray, joining the City Council in 2000 and served two terms as mayor before being elected to the Assembly in 2006.

“Another pillar of our community, gone,” lamented Jim Ventress, the SCV Boys and Girls Club Executive Director who worked with Smyth on a variety of projects. While a phone call from Smyth could bring about a large donation or move a political mountain, Ventress said that he was exceptionally fond of spending time with the kids at the club and enjoyed the homemade tamales that parents would bring for the annual board Christmas luncheon.

“He loved those tamales. For 20 years, he’d always ask if there were any extras, he’d like to take a few home for Sue, who couldn’t make it to the luncheon. I always sent home a few more to make sure she’d really get some.”

“Clyde saw more than just a building next to the park,” he continued, referring to the club’s Newhall facility that opened in 1992. “He saw a learning center with educational value for the kids whose parents were working or couldn’t give their kids too much help, those kids would have a place to go and learn.”

Smyth’s frank way of dealing with issues was something Ventress especially appreciated.

“I could be honest with him,” he explained. “He treated me like a human being. In many situations, Clyde was the first guy I’d talk to. He taught me that whatever you do, be the effective listener. Let others speak and get it out. Admit a mistake, assure them that you will look into the situation and get back to them.

“It sounds like common sense, but Clyde had a way…he always told me ‘you will figure it out,” Ventress said. “He was a very good person. He really cared.”

Gary Condie and his wife, Myrna, have been friends with the Smyth family for many years and the two men worked together as well. Their professional relationship began when Condie was appointed to the William S. Hart district advisory board.

“He had a masterful way of working with the public and he was a great example for me,” Condie recalled. “He had the gift of bringing people together and had the patience of Job.”

The pair continued working together for the youth of the community on the board of the SCV Boys and Girls Club, where they raised money for scholarships and building funds.

“There was always more need than dollars and Clyde would provide guidance on where to place those dollars,” Condie said.

“He made the valley a better place, especially for our youth,” he continued. “He did that in several ways, for the school district, trying to keep up with growth, curriculum, extracurricular activities, and the funding for all of those at the same time we were trying to find funds for construction. He was always on top of things, I never saw panic in his eyes, he was always ahead of the game.”

Condie counts his family as one of the many who moved to the Santa Clarita Valley for the quality of the schools, crediting Smyth.

“He certainly maintained a high reputation of public education in this valley, continually bringing in scores at the top of the state. Not only did parents move here to bring their children here, school teachers and other educators moved here to be part of his district.”

“I can tell you that there are a number of people in this valley who, when they look for an example of integrity, they look to Clyde Smyth.”

Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich added his condolences to the many pouring in on Monday morning.

“From his long career with the Hart High School District, to his work with the Council and as its Mayor, Clyde was a hard-working public servant who worked cooperatively with my office and the County to improve the quality of life for all the residents of our Santa Clarita Valley.

He leaves a very commendable legacy of leadership and service and I am proud to have known him as a colleague and friend.  Christine and I send our prayers and condolences to Sue, Cameron, Colin and their families.”

Former Boys and Girls Club Board President Brad Spahr helped Smyth organize the military academy admissions program for McKeon, then stood back and watched it take off under his leadership.

“Clyde was a great guy. We had a bond because we both served in military,” Spahr said. “I volunteered to help him start the district and the selection process, but Clyde went on to establish the best relationship with the academy’s admissions offices. Usually, there were one or two vacancies for Buck’s district, but because of the relationships he’d formed, we’d have five or six kids admitted to the academies with our kids.”

Spahr said that Smyth was an expert at seeking out unfilled vacancies from other Congressional districts and making local candidates available. He also credited him with keeping the dropout rate from the 25th district lower than the national average.

“Clyde was a very wise person,” he continued. “When I took over as President (of the Club), he was the one I always turned to when I had a question, needed wise input or another angle or way to approach something. He would always come up with great insight.”

“Everything he did for this community was to make it a better place, certainly for my brother and I and all of the families of Santa Clarita,” said Cameron Smyth. “I know he’s proud that my children go to the local schools and to see the school system still performing as well as it has been.”

“My dad’s life was about service, starting with his career in the military and then moving in to education and elected office, I think my dad couldn’t have been more proud that both my brother and I followed in his path of service, my brother in the military and me in public service.

“Ultimately my dad’s greatest joy was coaching,” Smyth said, hesitating. “My dad was a busy guy and he always found time to do that, even when he didn’t know anything about the sport, we used to joke, that even if he didn’t know anything about the sport, he knew how to yell and to make us run.”

He said his father always made time to be present, which he appreciates even more now.

“When I was playing sports at Hart, he always found a way to be on the campus Hart in the afternoons, he was always there for practices,” he said. “Even after he slowed down, he wasn’t going to miss any one of my kids’ games, or my brother’s boy’s games. That’s what brought him joy; that was what we always talked about, ‘When’s the next game, when’s the next season, can’t wait to get out there and watch the boys.’ So I think that’s what I got to see as him being a dad, beyond the superintendent and the mayor.

“Those are the lessons that both my brother and I have tried to take from him,” he explained. “My dad’s door was always open, it didn’t matter, I tried to pattern myself after that; my dad had this way, even after he voted against you, or disagreed with you, you felt good about it. I have tried to emulate that, because he just had that way about him.

“They say when you’re the child of a public official and you run for office yourself, you inherit 100 percent of your dad’s enemies and 50 percent of his friends. I didn’t have that because my dad didn’t have that many. I heard over and over, ‘I may not have agreed with your dad, but he always treated us with respect, he heard the issue and did it the right thing.’”

 

Watch: Clyde Smyth shares his family history => http://www.scvtv.com/html/scvhs2007smythbtv.html

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.

No Comments

    Leave a Comment


    SCV NewsBreak
    LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
    Monday, Nov 25, 2024
    City Emphasizes Pedestrian Safety on Orchard Village Road
    As part of Santa Clarita’s ongoing commitment to public safety, small dividers will be installed on Orchard Village Road in the coming weeks.
    Monday, Nov 25, 2024
    COC Named 2024 Champion for Excellence in Placement in Black Math Success
    The Campaign for College Opportunity has named College of the Canyons a 2024 Champion for Excellence in Placement in Black Math Success.
    Monday, Nov 25, 2024
    Dec. 9: Valencia Community Center Grand Opening
    The city of Santa Clarita will host the grand opening of the Valencia Community Center on Monday, Dec. 9 at 10 a.m. at the center at 26147 McBean Parkway in Valencia.
    Keep Up With Our Facebook

    Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
    1916 - A score of Wobblies bust up Newhall Jail after commandeering SP freight train [story]
    Wobblies logo
    As part of Santa Clarita’s ongoing commitment to public safety, small dividers will be installed on Orchard Village Road in the coming weeks.
    City Emphasizes Pedestrian Safety on Orchard Village Road
    The Campaign for College Opportunity has named College of the Canyons a 2024 Champion for Excellence in Placement in Black Math Success.
    COC Named 2024 Champion for Excellence in Placement in Black Math Success
    The city of Santa Clarita will host the grand opening of the Valencia Community Center on Monday, Dec. 9 at 10 a.m. at the center at 26147 McBean Parkway in Valencia.
    Dec. 9: Valencia Community Center Grand Opening
    Join a community discussion on retail theft Monday, Dec. 16 from 4-5:30 p.m. featuring California State Assemblywoman Pilar Schiavo, Assemblymember Rick Zbur and a panel of industry experts.
    Dec. 16: Community Conversation on Retail Theft with Pilar Schiavo
    All For Kids is seeking foster families and now offers two virtual ways for individuals and/or couples to learn how to help children in foster care while reunifying with birth families or how to provide legal permanency by adoption.
    Dec. 19: All For Kids Virtual Orientations on Foster Care and Adoption
    As millions of motorists gear up for travel, the California Highway Patrol is gearing up, too. Starting at 6:01 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 27, and running through 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 1, the CHP will activate its annual Thanksgiving Maximum Enforcement Period.
    Nov. 27-Dec. 1: CHP Maximum Enforcement Period
    The 4th Annual Newhall Holiday Marketplace will take place 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 8 at the Newhall Community Center, 22421 Market St., Newhall CA, 91321.
    Dec. 8:  Newhall Holiday Marketplace
    College of the Canyons will enter the postseason as the No. 12 seed in the California Community College Athletic Association (3C2A) Women's Volleyball Southern California Regional Playoffs.
    No. 12 Canyons Women’s Volleyball to Begin 3C2A SoCal Regionals
    The Thanksgiving holiday is all about gratitude. Being thankful for what we have and all the blessings we have in our lives.
    Ken Striplin | Thankful for Our Nonprofits
    For the first time in The Master's University athletics history, a team has won the NAIA national championship. The women's cross country team finished ahead of Taylor University by one point to win the NAIA women's cross country national championship Friday, Nov. 22, at the Gans Creek Cross Country Course in Columbia, Mo.
    TMU Women’s Cross Country Wins National Championship, Men Fourth
    The California Department of Public Health is warning the public to avoid consuming one batch of cream top, whole raw milk produced and packaged by Raw Farm, LLC of Fresno County due to a detection of bird flu virus in a retail sample.
    Raw Milk Recall Due to Bird Flu Virus
    The Acton Agua Dulce Arts Council will host the "Winner’s Circle Art Show" at the Acton Agua Dulce Public Library, starting Saturday, Jan. 11-Saturday, Feb. 22.
    ‘Winners Circle Art Show’ at Acton Agua Dulce Library
    1875 - Vasquez lieutenant Clodoveo Chavez reportedly killed by bounty hunters in Arizona Territory [story]
    Clodoveo Chavez story
    The Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk has reported that there are less than 20,000 ballots remaining to be counted in the Los Angeles County area.
    Election ’24 Recap: Less Than 20,000 Votes Remain to be Tallied in County
    2003 - Ruth Newhall, longtime co-owner/editor of The Signal, dies in Berkeley [story]
    Ruth Newhall
    1931 - Fall Roundup held at Hoot Gibson's Saugus Rodeo [story]
    Hoot Gibson's 1931 Saugus Rodeo
    The Santa Clarita Valley Chamber of Commerce will hold its annual Awards + Installation event on Friday, Jan. 31 at the Hyatt Regency.
    Jan. 31: SCV Chamber Awards + Installation Early Bird Tickets
    The Valley Industry Assoction will host a Cocktails & Conversation event with Cameron Smyth on Thursday, Dec. 12, 5:30=7:30 p.m. at Margarita’s Mexican Grill, 23320 Valencia Blvd., Valencia, CA 91355.
    Dec. 12: Cocktails & Conversation with Cameron Smyth
    Following an extensive search, the Governing Board of the William S. Hart Union High School District has unanimously selected current Interim Superintendent Dr. Michael Vierra as the new Hart District Superintendent, filling the vacancy created when Mike Kuhlman resigned effective June 30.
    Hart Board Selects Current Interim Superintendent to Fill Vacancy
    "Christmas Carol: The True Meaning of Christmas" will be performed on stage at the Canyon Theatre Guild on weekends beginning Friday, Nov. 29 thru Monday, Dec. 23 at 24242 Main St., Newhall, CA 91321.
    Nov. 29: ‘Christmas Carol, The True Meaning of Christmas’
    The California Air Resources Board has approved a $34.94 million incentives funding plan that will continue support ongoing efforts to increase access to medium- and heavy-duty zero-emission trucks, buses and equipment, with a focus on small businesses.
    CARB Incentive Plan Focuses on Fleets for Small Businesses
    Preparing to decorate for the holidays? If you come across broken string lights that are no longer usable, instead of tossing in the trash you can now drop them off for recycling at one of the SAFE collection centers
    Recycle Broken Holiday Lights at SAFE Collection Centers
    SCVNews.com