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Screenshot: Kevin Korenthal on the sousaphone. Click to enlarge.
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Sierra Vista Junior High School marching band participates in the 1986 Frontier Days Parade on Soledad Canyon Road.
Video courtesy of Kevin D. Korenthal, who is playing the sousaphone (tuba). The band was under the direction of Les Hershberger.
"You can actually see me pretty well on tuba after the scene break," Korenthal said (pers. comm. 2017).
"I believe we did take home a prize and many others over the season." Korenthal's father, Rick Korenthal, was the videographer.
The following year, the city of Santa Clarita was formed. Turn up the clock three decades, and our tuba player was appointed to the Santa Clarita Parks Commission in 2014.
He served until spring 2017 when he moved to Texas.
His official city biography follows.
[City of Santa Clarita, 2015] — Kevin D. Korenthal (b. Feb. 29, 1972) is a 32-year resident of Santa Clarita, specifically Canyon Country. Mr. Korenthal's earliest local activism involved getting traffic signals installed at particularly dangerous intersections around Santa Clarita in the early 1990s (when he was still in his teens). More recently, Mr. Korenthal has participated in local, state and national issues as they relate to work, recreation and the basic needs of the citizens. He has volunteered his time and resources on the Newhall Redevelopment Committee, is a founding member of the Santa Clarita Valley Bicycle Coalition, a board member of the Friends of the Santa Clarita Public Libraries and the Santa Clarita Valley Mayor's Committee for Employment of Individuals with Disabilities.
As an avid road cyclist, mountain cyclist, swimmer and father of children who use the city's parks, trails and community programs, Kevin has always felt connected to the decisions this particular commission makes. That is why he applied to be appointed by the city council to the Parks, Recreation, and Community Services commission.
As an appointee to the commission Kevin intends to be a strong voice for multi-use policies in access to all city public recreational property. Kevin believes by ensuring that all user groups, including the disabled where possible, have equal and safe access are we responsibly and fairly managing these assets. He feels this is especially true of the growing unpaved trail system throughout our open spaces which Kevin feels should continue to be acquired and developed for responsible recreational use.
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Sierra Vista takes the top prize in a different parade in Fillmore in May 1986 (previous school year), as reported in The Signal. Click to enlarge.
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Frontier Days started in 1963 as an annual fall celebration, usually with a parade and often with a rodeo, in Canyon Country — thanks in large part to Arthur E. Evans.
Art Evans was a big wheel in Canyon Country long before anybody thought to call it Canyon Country. Back then it was Mint Canyon, which is really the Sierra Highway corridor, which was dotted with places like the Solemint Store and MacDougall's Café and Dillenbeck Market.
Map of 1964 Frontier Days activities from program published in The Signal, October 8, 1964. "Community Building" is the current Elks Lodge at 17766 Sierra Highway. Click to enlarge.
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The cross-town rivalry between Newhall and Saugus (which included Mint Canyon) can't be overstated. As three-time honorary mayor and two-time president of the Mint Canyon Chamber of Commerce — which started in 1956 and incorporated Nov. 29, 1957 — Evans was a huge booster of eastern stretches of the Santa Clarita Valley. In October 1963, Art Evans started the Santa Clarita Sentinel newspaper as a rival to The Newhall Signal, which Scott Newhall purchased that very year.
The following month, in November 1963, Evans headed the first Frontier Days celebration. Anne and Ken Lynch, another pair of Mint Canyon Chamber members, are credited with having thought it up.
Initially a weekend event, it was held at the Mint Canyon Community Building (which became the Elks Lodge) on Sierra Highway.
The following is from a Frontier Days festival program write-up by Linda Pedersen:
The early celebrations included donkey rides for the adults, muddy pig wrestling and greased pole contests for the children, and plenty of good hometown cooking.
The first Frontier Belle contest, which was also Anne Lynch's idea, started a few years later. In those days, one of the requirements to compete for Frontier Belle was a knowledge of horsemanship. As the event grew and rodeos were sporadically included, the Frontier Belle not only rode a horse in the parade, but also performed on horseback in the rodeo's opening ceremonies.
Frontier Days Fairground Locations 1963-1996
By Tricia Lemon Putnam
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1963-1970 |
Mint Canyon Community Building, aka Canyon Country community building and later known as the Elks Lodge at 17766 Sierra Hwy., above Solemint Junction. |
1971-1972 |
Little League baseball field, 19004 Soledad Cyn. |
1973-1976 |
VFW Post, formerly Ace Cain's ranch, 27009 Sand Canyon Rd. |
1977-1978 |
The field behind Howard & Phil's and Allstate Savings, 19100-19034 Soledad Cyn. & Hideaway. |
1979 |
27250 Luther Drive, behind McDonald's on Soledad Cyn. |
1980 |
Old Mitchell Ranch off Sand Cyn Rd., near Antelope Valley Freeway |
1981-1986 |
Haddad property at 18500 Via Princessa |
1987-1993 |
Lost Canyon Rd., off Soledad, between Sierra Hwy. & Sand Cyn Rd. Address given in 1987 was 27556 Woodfall Rd. |
1994-1995 |
Saugus Speedway |
1996 |
Held the July 4th weekend instead of October. Separate parade canceled; Frontier Days float was included in Newhall July 4th parade. Fairgrounds located across from the Speedway in lot along Soledad Cyn Rd., west of Golden Oak Rd., adjacent to Soccer Center and Santa Clarita Lanes (21613 & 21615 Soledad Cyn. Rd.) |
1997 |
Event cancelled |
Source: Advertisements & articles in The Signal
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A summer kick-off barbecue was added to the Frontier Days tradition in the 1970s. The growing chamber and community delighted in finger-licking barbecued ribs and chicken along with a tangy cole slaw made by Art Evans. Many a cook tried to learn Art's secret recipe, but the former chamber board member and president kept it a well-guarded secret. (The reader will note that Pedersen was forced to attend countless rubber-chicken events throughout her career as a society reporter, so this is high praise.)
The barbecue was the highlight of the Canyon Country summer. It was then that the Frontier Belle and her court were announced, and planning for the fall celebration began in earnest.
Over the years, the Mint Canyon Chamber evolved into the Canyon Country Chamber, and the event was expanded into a three- and then four-day event, moving from the Mint Canyon Community Building to progressively larger dirt lots, empty space being easy to find in those days.
As the area grew, the empty lots filled with shopping centers and tract housing. The event was moved to more remote sites near (or in) the Santa Clara riverbed. Those areas, likewise, were soon taken up by condominium and commercial developments (think Jake's Way), and the event had to move again.
On July 1, 1995, the cross-town rivalry officially ended, at least in a business sense, when the Canyon Country Chamber merged into the Santa Clarita Valley Chamber of Commerce, which not too many years earlier had been known as the Newhall-Saugus-Valencia Chamber.
The SCV Chamber staged the 1995 celebration at the Saugus Speedway — a onetime rodeo venue, but you wouldn't know it from the modern asphalt surface — and in 1996, the event moved across the street to (Valencia developer) Newhall Land's Riverpark property, aka River Village, which at the time was raw land. No longer strictly a Canyon Country celebration, even the date changed — to the four-day July 4 weekend.
Except for nighttime fireworks and the morning parade in Newhall (whose 1996 theme was "Celebrating Life on the Frontier" in a nod to Canyon Country), July 4 weekend events in Santa Clarita don't have a good track record of success. You can't draw a crowd. Many people travel, and for those who stay home, the afternoon gets too darned hot.
By the time the curtain fell on the 1996 event, the 30-some-odd-year Frontier Days tradition already had been relegated to history.
— Leon Worden 2013