SALES
From page lA
compromise, ever."
"Enid's skill, deep knowledge and enthusiasm for historic
preservation were remarkable and inspiring," commented
attorney Susan Brandt-Hawley, who worked for Sales in
many of her fights to thwart demolitions. "She educated so
many about preservation and kept local agencies aware that
threats to historic resources would be carefully monitored."
"Her take-no-prisoners approach roiled many who misun-
derstood that this was the only way this 'warrior' could fight
the good fight," said friend and neighbor Suzanne Paboojian.
"She started the focus on what is historic in Carmel,"
commented Mayor Sue McCloud, and the documents the city
uses to determine buildings' significance"are probably a nat-
ural outgrowth of what she started years ago as chair of what
is now the historic resources board."
James Bryant and his wife, Mary Hill, met Sales after
buying an historic adobe in Monterey in 1999. Bryant
formed the Alliance of Monterey Area Preservationists, and
Sales joined its board. They became close friends, and toward
the end, they helped take care of her in her failing health.
"We were kindred spirits," Bryant said. "Enid was an
inspiration for many reasons."
Born June 3, 1922, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Sales moved
to San Francisco with her family around the age of 10,
according to Bryant.
Her mother had a home in Carmel, and Paboojian said
Sales recalled "how she and her brother would run from the
beach and up the back steps
of La Playa hotel, where she
always enjoyed going for a
drink or dinner later in life."
She attended Reed 1
College in Oregon and was
married for a short time to
- jazz critic Grover Sales.
In San Francisco in the
mid-1970s, she ran the city's
redevelopment agency and
"organized moving a dozen
Victorian homes in the mid-
dle of the night in order to
save them, shutting down the
city's transit and traffic light
systems, and making sure
everything was up and run-
lung in time for the morning
commute,"Paboojianreport-
ed. /
Later in Carmel, she
fought to place Sunset
Center on the National
Register of Historic Places,
but she also savored the
city's less grand buildings.
"It was the good exam-
ples of vernacular, ordinary i
things that ought to be pre-
served - all the little cot-
tages of Carmel," Livingston
said. "She was a champion
in my book."
t In 2006, the California
Preservation Foundation
named her Preservationist of
the Year, and AMAP gave
her a Lifetime Achievement
Award. In addition to orga-
nizing and running her own
Carmel Preservation
Foundation, she served on the county's historic resources
review board.
She often took on preservation work almost single-hand-
edly, recently fighting the demolition of the Marsh's building
in Monterey that Bryant now sees as a memorial to her.
"She loved Carmel so much," he added. "She wanted to·
establish the downtown core as an historic district and pro-
mote it."
In fact, "heritage tourism;' will be the topic of a Sept. 19
forum, A Bright Future for a City's Economy, which Sales
organized. "It was her hope it would inspire our area to use
historic buildings for good economic reasons, not just for
sentimental reasons."
While a formidable, uncompromising opponent, Sales
was also funny, sharp, congenial and bright.
"She adored bourbon - sometimes gin - and loved good
stories and sitting around with people, and talking and laugh-
ing and good foodi' Livingston said.
Bryant and his wife visited Sales at the hospital the night
before she died. Despite her struggles with pain and labored
breathing, they managed to share a few laughs.
"She was sharp to the end, and funny, and so pragmatic
and objective about things,
including herself," he said. 1
"There's a void I don't think
can be filled."
Bryant said a pally will
be held to celebrate her life.
"There will be a Jack
Daniels for her," he said.
, OCR Text: SALES
From page lA
compromise, ever."
"Enid's skill, deep knowledge and enthusiasm for historic
preservation were remarkable and inspiring," commented
attorney Susan Brandt-Hawley, who worked for Sales in
many of her fights to thwart demolitions. "She educated so
many about preservation and kept local agencies aware that
threats to historic resources would be carefully monitored."
"Her take-no-prisoners approach roiled many who misun-
derstood that this was the only way this 'warrior' could fight
the good fight," said friend and neighbor Suzanne Paboojian.
"She started the focus on what is historic in Carmel,"
commented Mayor Sue McCloud, and the documents the city
uses to determine buildings' significance"are probably a nat-
ural outgrowth of what she started years ago as chair of what
is now the historic resources board."
James Bryant and his wife, Mary Hill, met Sales after
buying an historic adobe in Monterey in 1999. Bryant
formed the Alliance of Monterey Area Preservationists, and
Sales joined its board. They became close friends, and toward
the end, they helped take care of her in her failing health.
"We were kindred spirits," Bryant said. "Enid was an
inspiration for many reasons."
Born June 3, 1922, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Sales moved
to San Francisco with her family around the age of 10,
according to Bryant.
Her mother had a home in Carmel, and Paboojian said
Sales recalled "how she and her brother would run from the
beach and up the back steps
of La Playa hotel, where she
always enjoyed going for a
drink or dinner later in life."
She attended Reed 1
College in Oregon and was
married for a short time to
- jazz critic Grover Sales.
In San Francisco in the
mid-1970s, she ran the city's
redevelopment agency and
"organized moving a dozen
Victorian homes in the mid-
dle of the night in order to
save them, shutting down the
city's transit and traffic light
systems, and making sure
everything was up and run-
lung in time for the morning
commute,"Paboojianreport-
ed. /
Later in Carmel, she
fought to place Sunset
Center on the National
Register of Historic Places,
but she also savored the
city's less grand buildings.
"It was the good exam-
ples of vernacular, ordinary i
things that ought to be pre-
served - all the little cot-
tages of Carmel," Livingston
said. "She was a champion
in my book."
t In 2006, the California
Preservation Foundation
named her Preservationist of
the Year, and AMAP gave
her a Lifetime Achievement
Award. In addition to orga-
nizing and running her own
Carmel Preservation
Foundation, she served on the county's historic resources
review board.
She often took on preservation work almost single-hand-
edly, recently fighting the demolition of the Marsh's building
in Monterey that Bryant now sees as a memorial to her.
"She loved Carmel so much," he added. "She wanted to·
establish the downtown core as an historic district and pro-
mote it."
In fact, "heritage tourism;' will be the topic of a Sept. 19
forum, A Bright Future for a City's Economy, which Sales
organized. "It was her hope it would inspire our area to use
historic buildings for good economic reasons, not just for
sentimental reasons."
While a formidable, uncompromising opponent, Sales
was also funny, sharp, congenial and bright.
"She adored bourbon - sometimes gin - and loved good
stories and sitting around with people, and talking and laugh-
ing and good foodi' Livingston said.
Bryant and his wife visited Sales at the hospital the night
before she died. Despite her struggles with pain and labored
breathing, they managed to share a few laughs.
"She was sharp to the end, and funny, and so pragmatic
and objective about things,
including herself," he said. 1
"There's a void I don't think
can be filled."
Bryant said a pally will
be held to celebrate her life.
"There will be a Jack
Daniels for her," he said.
, Heritage Society of Pacific Grove,Historical Collections,Names of People about town,S through T File names,Sales,SALES_003.pdf,SALES_003.pdf 1 Page 1, Tags: SALES_003.PDF, SALES_003.pdf 1 Page 1