Legacies
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Roy Alvarado, Bob Henry, Gray Lunde, Jason Ferguson.
An activist, a policeman, a budding water polo star, a basketball
coach.
They were sons, a father, a husband, a mentor. And in each case they
were taken from us way too soon.
But despite that, members of the community have gone to great strides
to ensure that the spirit and names of these four individuals will live
on in Newport-Mesa.
Bob Henry -- Retired No. 104
When Newport Beach police Officer Bob Henry succumbed from a bullet
wound on April 13, 1995, the community was heartbroken.
Many had hoped that the 30-year-old officer would pull through from
the injuries he had sustained a month earlier as he tried to disarm a
suicidal gunman in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church parking lot on 16th
Street.
But despite the prayers and hope, Henry’s life was lost, and the
close-knit Police Department felt it the hardest.
Now, Henry’s life is memorialized in several ways. The Robert Henry
Memorial Scholarship has been created to support local high school
athletics and there is a city park bearing his name at the Castaways
site, mere steps from where he was killed.
Those will ensure the spirit of the officer, a member of the Police
Department’s all-star football team, will go on in our hearts and minds
forever.
Gray Lunde -- Retired No. 105
It’s hard to imagine anything more painful than the loss of a child.
So when Bob and Peggy Lunde learned, as we did, that their 14-year-old
son, Gray, a budding water polo player at Newport Harbor High, had passed
away from a congenital heart defect in October of 1995, we tried to
imagine such a crushing blow.
And so did the community.
The residents here did their best to memorialize the young athlete
with the gray eyes who had, at a young age, already managed to deeply
touch not only his family, but his coaches, teammates and friends.
Since his death, the community and his parents have organized efforts
to keep his spirit alive. At Newport Harbor High, athletes practice in
the Gray Lunde weight room. A seaside tree has been planted by lifeguards
near the Balboa Pier in his name and each summer competitors participate
in the Gray Lunde Iron Man event that includes running and swimming races
-- an event similar to one Gray had participated in at the age of 9.
Roy Alvarado -- Retired No. 106
Alvarado, who died in April of 1996 on his 61st birthday, was a local
gang counselor and community leader who abandoned a life of crime,
struggled -- and won -- a battle against drug abuse.
He used his experiences to help others with similar problems.
He started a myriad of groups including Madres Costa Mesa, Latinos
Costa Mesa, and Todos Hermanos. He founded Costa Mesa’s first Latino
Alcoholics Anonymous group and he spent countless hours offering advice
to young children and teens involved in the city’s Save Our Youth
program.
Through the work of Alvarado’s son, Nick, and local attorney Bill
Turpit, his legacy lives on through the programs he created. It also
lives through the youth he has influenced and brought back from the brink
of tragedy to instead lead productive lives.
Jason Ferguson -- Retired No. 107
Costa Mesa’s High School students and athletes had heavy hearts in
January of 1996, when it was learned that their 24-year-old basketball
coach lost his battle against cancer.
When he died, Ferguson, a beloved leader, was joined by players and
other coaches who had kept a vigil at the hospital.
Though weakened by the cancer, Ferguson never gave up and he continued
to coach, even when he was relegated to a wheelchair.
After his death, a scholarship fund, a three-on-three memorial
basketball tournament and a trophy case at Costa Mesa High were all
dedicated with the name Jason Ferguson.
Indeed, Ferguson’s father, Marshall, even tried to get a television
movie of the week made to chronicle his son’s brave but short life.
Their lives were sources of inspiration for many and to lose them was
tragic. But thankfully, through the works of family, friends and the
community, they -- and their works -- will never be forgotten.
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