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  • Azad McIver leaves town a lasting legacy

    Sierra Sun, CA
    July 20 2004

    Azad McIver leaves town a lasting legacy

    Renée Shadforth

    Azad McIver was a small, seemingly shy woman who lived in a tiny
    Gateway cottage, but her longtime friends say she had a huge giving
    spirit that had a large impact on the Truckee of today.

    McIver died July 13 at the age of 95. She and her siblings - Roxie
    Archie and Richard Joseph, who preceded her in death - emigrated from
    Turkish Armenia in the early 1900s and left a strong legacy in the
    Truckee community.

    McIver, considered the most soft-spoken and easygoing of her
    siblings, was one of the last in a generation that formed Truckee
    into what it is today.

    "Azad was this remarkable spirit. She always had a giggle or a
    laugh," said Embree "Breeze" Cross, a longtime Truckee resident and
    former town council member. "She always found delight in things. She
    was the most delightful girl."

    Namesakes of McIver's generation are splattered all over Truckee.
    There are McIver Arena and McIver Hill, named after Azad McIver's
    late husband, Jim. And then there is the Joseph Government Center,
    named after the Joseph family.

    In 1949, McIver's brother donated the land for Tahoe Forest Hospital
    and the money for many of its facilities. Decades later, after her
    siblings died, McIver provided more land for the hospital's current
    expansion project.

    "They wanted to build more, I said 'OK,'" McIver told the Sierra Sun
    in March 2003, her words colored with the remnants of her Old Country
    accent. "My brother's wish was to build a hospital. I'd rather take
    care of our people here than give it to Uncle [Sam]."

    McIver saw most of her friends die in the same hospital. Others moved
    from Truckee to more temperate climates.

    Azad McIver outlasted most of them.

    "I've had a lot of good friends," she told the Sierra Sun. "Most of
    them just aren't around anymore. I come from good stock."



    From Armenia to Truckee

    The imprint the Joseph (formerly Hovsepian) family left on Truckee
    came after many life struggles and a lot of old-fashioned hard work.
    Until her death, McIver was able to tell the stories from her youth
    in the Old Country and Truckee in astonishing detail.

    McIver was born in Harpoot, in Turkish Armenia, on Oct. 12, 1908 - 18
    years after her brother, Dick, and four years after her sister,
    Roxie.

    At age 6, McIver fled her homeland under her 10-year-old sister's
    wing during the Armenian massacre. They left Turkey on foot, walking
    through the Syrian desert to Aleppo, Syria. The girls were placed in
    an orphanage staffed by British and French missionaries who kept them
    from starving to death.

    After contacting their Uncle Mgurdich in Andover, Mass., the sisters
    purchased third-class boat tickets and came to the United States on
    July 4, 1920.

    "I cried - what a beautiful place with beautiful people," Azad
    recalled about her experience coming to America. "It was strange. All
    I knew before was Turks, and they wanted to kill us."

    At 16, Azad's sister, Roxie, married and moved to Worchester, Mass.
    Soon after, the newlyweds and Azad moved to Chicago.

    In 1922, Dick Joseph - who moved to the States in 1906 and to Truckee
    in 1917 - advertised for his sisters in an Armenian newspaper
    published in Fresno, Calif. Someone in Chicago brought the ad to the
    sisters' attention, and McIver and Archie met their brother in
    Truckee later that year.



    A legacy of her own

    Although McIver always maintained she donated money to fulfill the
    wishes of her brother, who passed away in 1986, McIver created quite
    a legacy of her own, said Bob Tilton, who started the Tahoe Forest
    Hospital Foundation in 1987.

    "Dick did a lot for the community, but Azad carried the banner after
    his death," Tilton said. "Every single expansion the hospital has
    ever done, Azad either took part in fund-raising or donated money."

    Tilton, 58, grew up in the Truckee-North Tahoe area and knew the
    Joseph family well. He went to Azad once a year to seek a donation
    for the hospital, even when her older sister was the one handling the
    family's business.

    "[McIver] definitely felt compelled to help the hospital. She always
    told me the hospital was vital to building a strong community,"
    Tilton said.

    In addition to what she gave to Tahoe Forest Hospital, McIver became
    a founding member of the Truckee Tahoe Community Foundation in 1999.

    The Joseph family also donated to the University of Nevada, Reno
    Foundation and Shriners Hospital, among other causes.



    Modest living

    A photographer and barber by trade, Dick Joseph made his money as a
    businessman. He owned Manstyle Barbers, a cigar store and the Pastime
    Club in downtown Truckee.

    As a young adult, Azad worked at the Pastime, which was a popular
    local hangout and speakeasy at the time. Azad met many interesting
    people while working at the restaurant, including her late husband,
    Jim McIver, a local blacksmith, dairyman and car salesman who
    delivered mail to Tahoe City. Azad and Jim McIver were married in
    Reno on Aug. 10, 1944.

    In 1935, Richard Joseph purchased the land between Gateway and Donner
    Lake from the Union Ice Company. The family built the Gateway Motel
    in 1939, near the present site of Safeway,

    McIver lived modestly in one of the former rental cottages in Gateway
    for decades. The walls of her home were plastered with photos
    depicting Truckee at a different time.

    "They had a lot of money, but you'd never know it," Tilton said of
    the Joseph family. "They traveled a lot, but they didn't dress fancy.
    Dick would be dressed in his old coat. Azad would be dressed in her
    old coat."



    Responsibility for community

    When Truckee became a town in 1993, Archie and McIver asked
    then-Mayor Kathleen Eagan and council member Breeze Cross to come to
    their Gateway home. Cross had no idea why at the time.

    "They called us over, and they'd heard the town didn't have any
    money, since it was new," Cross recalls. "They said 'It's terrible
    that the town doesn't have any money, so here's a check for $25,000.'
    We were amazed. It was so touching."

    Archie and McIver were known to pop into a public meeting every now
    and then when an important decision was going to be made. They wanted
    to know about the decisions made in their community, Tilton said.

    "That's the way our community used to be - we helped each other. We
    had to," Tilton said. "Any decision you made affected someone you
    know personally."

    In 1997, Archie - McIver's sister and lifelong companion - passed
    away in the Tahoe Forest Hospital long-term care center. Since Archie
    handled most of the family's business, there was some concern about
    McIver, the shy sister, carrying the family torch.

    But friends say she blossomed and continued to give in the Joseph
    family spirit.

    "Truckee was their family and they always made us part of their
    family," Tilton said of the Josephs. "The whole family just took it
    on as their responsibility, and Azad carried that legacy."
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