The Saga Of Four Intertwined Bay Area Families

The Saga Of Four Intertwined Bay Area Families

As Arte Johnson said many years ago on Laugh-In, Very Interesting

By Dan Walters of The Daily Republic (Updated)

Gavin Newsom was the first Democrat in more than a century to succeed another Democrat as governor and the succession also marks a big generational transition in California politics.

A long-dominant geriatric quintet from the San Francisco Bay Area — Governor Jerry Brown, Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, House Democrat leader Nancy Pelosi, and state Democrat chairman John Burton slowly ceded power to younger political strivers.

Moreover, Newsom succeeded someone who could be considered his quasi-uncle since his inauguration continued the decades-long saga of four San Francisco families intertwined by blood, by marriage, by money, by culture, and, of course, by politics — the Browns, the Newsoms, the Pelosis, and the Gettys.

The connections date back at least 80 years, to when Jerry Brown’s father, Pat Brown, ran for San Francisco district attorney, losing in 1939 but winning in 1943, with the help of his close friend and Gavin Newsom’s grandfather, businessman William Newsom.

Fast forward two decades.

Governor Pat Brown’s administration developed Squaw Valley for the 1960 Winter Olympics and afterward awarded a concession to operate it to William Newsom and his partner, John Pelosi.
 
One of Pelosi’s sons, Paul, married Nancy D’Alesandro, who went into politics and has now reclaimed the speakership of the House of Representatives.

Another Pelosi son married William Newsom’s daughter, Barbara. Until they divorced, that made Nancy Pelosi something like an aunt by marriage to Gavin Newsom (Nancy Pelosi’s brother-in-law was Gavin Newsom’s uncle).

The Squaw Valley concession was controversial at the time and created something of a rupture between the two old friends.

William Newsom wanted to make significant improvements to the ski complex, including a convention center, but Brown’s Department of Parks and Recreation balked. Newsom and his son, an attorney also named William, held a series of contentious meetings with officials over the issue.

An eight-page memo about those 1966 meetings from the department’s director, Fred Jones, buried in the Pat Brown archives, describes the Newsoms as being embittered and the senior Newsom threatening to “hurt the governor politically” as Brown ran for a third term that year against Ronald Reagan.

Pat Brown’s bid for a third term failed, and the Reagan administration later bought out the Newsom concession. But the Brown-Newsom connection continued as Brown’s son, Jerry, claimed the governorship in 1974. He appointed the younger William Newsom, a personal friend and Gavin’s father, to a Placer County judgeship in 1975 and three years later to the state Court of Appeal.

Judge Newsom, who died December 12, 2018, had been an attorney for oil magnate J. Paul Getty, most famously delivering $3 million to Italian kidnapers of Getty’s grandson in 1973.

While serving on the appellate bench in the 1980s, he helped Getty’s son, Gordon, secure a change in state trust law that allowed him to claim his share of a multi-heir trust.
 
After Newsom retired from the bench in 1995, he became administrator of Gordon Getty’s trust, telling one interviewer, “I make my living working for Gordon Getty.” The trust provided seed money for the Plumpjack chain of restaurants and wine shops that Newsom’s son, Gavin, and Gordon Getty’s son, Billy, developed, the first being in a Squaw Valley hotel.
 
Gavin Newsom had been informally adopted by the Gettys after his parents divorced.
 
Newsom’s Plumpjack business (named for an opera that Gordon Getty wrote) led to a career in San Francisco politics, a stint as mayor, the lieutenant governorship, and now to the governorship, succeeding his father’s old friend.

He’s keeping it all in the extended family.

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