Longtime OCC secretary, historian dies
Susan McCormack
Longtime Corona del Mar resident Thelma Harwood, historian and secretary
with the Coast Community College District for 27 years, died Friday of
complications from Parkinson’s disease. She was 85.
Mrs. Harwood was born in Indiana and married Meredith “Woody” Harwood.
The couple moved to Corona del Mar during World War II, when her husband
was stationed at the Santa Ana Army Base and she was a Red Cross
volunteer.
After Orange Coast College was built on the land of the former base, Mrs.
Harwood became employed at the school. From 1951 to 1964, she served as
secretary to OCC’s founding president, Dr. Basil H. Peterson.
When Peterson retired in 1965, Mrs. Harwood was one of three editors to
present him with a 300-page book titled “Tumbleweeds to Roses: A History
of Orange Coast College.” Mrs. Harwood wrote the book’s second chapter,
which focused on the three-year history of the Santa Ana Army Base.
Mrs. Harwood also helped research and edit chapters written by 17 other
authors. Only 500 copies of the book were made, and college officials
said a few copies remain today in private collections, libraries, college
campuses and historical society archives. An online version is available
on the college’s Web site.
“I really didn’t know what I was getting myself into,” Mrs. Harwood
reportedly said about the book during a 1997 interview at the college. “I
was a secretary, not a writer or editor ... I’ve always been a quick
study, so I picked things up fairly swiftly.”
Mrs. Harwood later worked as secretary to the chancellor of the Coast
Community College District, Dr. Norman E. Watson. She retired in 1978 and
was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease several months later. Her husband
died in 1981, but Mrs. Harwood continued to live in their Corona del Mar
home.
In 1991, the college awarded Mrs. Harwood with an honorary associate’s
degree. In 1994, Mrs. Harwood was confined to a wheelchair and moved to
Manor Care in Fountain Valley, where she died. She did not have any
children.
Friends and family of Mrs. Harwood described her as “cordial,”
“brilliant” and “courageous.” And, she loved cats.
“Her room was surrounded by cats,” said Tiffany Laplante of Manor Care.
Mrs. Harwood’s grand nephew, Barrett Bailey, added that she also loved
the Southwestern artist De Grazia. He also said while his great aunt had
no children of her own, she was very generous to him, writing letters and
always remembering to give him Christmas gifts.
Mrs. Harwood is survived by her older sister, Mary Bailey, of Fountain
Valley.
Private services will be held Nov. 15.
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