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Sacramento reflects on his legacy

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  • Sacramento reflects on his legacy

    Sacramento reflects on his legacy
    By Dion Nissenbaum and Mark Gladstone

    Posted on Sun, Jun. 06, 2004
    Mercury News Sacramento Bureau

    SACRAMENTO - Tucked away in a little-visited corner of the state
    Capitol, Ronald Reagan's portrait hangs beside those of his fellow
    former governors -- though his is the only one protected by glass.

    While Jerry Brown was derided as "Governor Moonbeam" and Gray Davis
    was recalled by disenchanted voters, Reagan is the only California
    governor whose official portrait was defaced, a reflection of the
    visceral reactions he still draws.

    But on Saturday in this city where Reagan's career as an elected
    official began 37 years ago, any criticism was mostly muffled by the
    grief of tourists and local residents.

    As word began to spread that the president had died, school groups,
    guided tours and visitors from around the globe trudged up four flights
    of carpeted stairs to stand below Reagan's portrait and reflect on
    his legacy.

    "Guys would have jumped off Niagara Falls for him," said William
    Edward Sullivan, a 79-year-old retired Army major who met Reagan two
    decades ago during a presidential stop at a militay base. "I really
    think he was one of the best presidents we ever had."

    Throughout the afternoon, visitors passed by Reagan's portrait and
    gazed up at the lifelike depiction of the smiling former governor
    standing in Capitol Park with the afternoon sun bouncing off the
    swoop of his trademark hair.

    "He was always a man of integrity," said Jerry Hunter, a pastor
    from Bradenton, Fla. "He gave America hope and built up the American
    spirit." In death, as in life, Reagan evoked mixed reactions.

    "He wasn't my favorite, but rest in peace, I guess," said one tourist
    who declined to give his name.

    For many years, Reagan's portrait greeted visitors entering the
    west side of the Capitol. But it was defaced several times over the
    years, with pranksters adding horns and a mustache, said tour guide
    Anne Adrian.

    After being restored, the painting was moved to the third floor, next
    to the impressionistic portrait of former Gov. Jerry Brown and the more
    traditional paintings of former Govs. Geore Deukmejian and Pete Wilson.

    Blocks from the Capitol at the Old Governor's Mansion, there was a
    mix of sadness and relief that Reagan was no longer suffering from
    the debilitating and draining effects of Alzheimer's.

    At midafternoon, the news was just sinking in for tour guides and
    visitors. The U.S. flag still had not been lowered, 90 minutes after
    the announcement that the state's 33rd governor had died.

    Reagan and his wife, Nancy, moved into the 127-year-old gingerbread
    house after his landslide victory over Democratic Gov. Pat Brown
    in 1966.

    But they stayed only three months, partly because the house was along
    a busy street across from a smelly gasoline station. Nor was it a
    child-friendly neighborhood for their active young son, Ron Jr.,
    who liked sliding down the home's banister.

    Despite their short stay, a tour guide said visitors always ask about
    the Reagans, especially about why there is just one photo of Nancy
    on display. The gift shop sells a Nancy Reagan Fashion Paper Doll
    et. And the guide said a display of a larger set of Reagan photos
    was planned even before Reagan's death.

    "It's sad because he left such a legacy in the United States," said
    Ken Toczyski, 48, a Louisville, Ky., minister. Recalling an uncertain
    America of the late 1970s, the minister said Reagan came in and said:
    "I believe in America. I think the people of America are what make
    us great, and I want to see that greatness restored."

    Visitors on Saturday said the events of Reagan's presidency are seared
    in their memories.

    "I can't believe he lived so long. I remember when he was elected and
    when he was shot. I remember what I was doing. I was in grade school,
    in sixth grade," said Joe Pounds, 34, a chef from Brooklyn, N.Y.,
    who grew up in Sacramento.

    It wasn't just everyday people who were recalling the Reagans. Senate
    President Pro Tem John Burton, D-San Francisco, who served in the
    Assembly when Reagan was governor, remembered his biting humor, even
    when he was a target. Burton recaled how Reagan once labeled him as
    "the one man in Sacramento who has the most to fear from the squirrels
    in Capitol Park."

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger canceled a trip to Las Vegas planned for
    Monday. Like Reagan, Schwarzenegger made the leap from Hollywood
    films to Sacramento. And before Reagan died, Schwarzenegger said
    there was another connection. "He has been a big idol of mine," said
    Schwarzenegger. "I've campaigned for him. I've gone out there handing
    out leaflets, making phone calls on his behalf, and was very active
    during the campaign to make sure he becomes the president. And this
    was at the time when I was not even a citizen yet."
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