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Harold D. McNaughton

Harold D. McNaughton was a California minister, land developer, and philanthropist whose 1988 master-planned development proposal laid the foundation for La Entrada. La Entrada is a 2,200-acre, 7,800-home community described as "city within a city" and among the largest planned developments in one of California's fastest-growing cities.

Early life
Harold D. McNaughton was born on July 14, 1926, in Nebraska, to Fred Archie McNaughton and Merle McNaughton. Harold's father was born in Muskogee (Indian Territory) in 1896, prior to Oklahoma statehood. His grandfather, John McNaughton, had settled in Indian Territory by 1894 as a tenant on Creek Nation land. During the Dust Bowl years of the mid-1930s, the McNaughton family, natives of Oklahoma, left the region and relocated to the Arvin area of Kern County, California around 1934. Arvin was part of the great migration of displaced families that John Steinbeck immortalized in The Grapes of Wrath. Harold grew up in the area near Weedpatch, home of the federal migrant labor camp on which Steinbeck's novel was based. In January 1938, when Harold was eleven years old, his father died at the age of 42, after only living in Kern County three years. == Ministry ==
Ministry
From a young age, McNaughton was active in church life in the Bakersfield area. He later received his seminary degree in 1949 from what was then called Southern California College, an Assembly of God-affiliated Christian university in Costa Mesa (now Vanguard University). He had to leave the college in the 1940s in order to support himself and his family but eventually returned to complete his degree. He was ordained as a minister of the Assembly of God Church. He later became deeply involved at the Melodyland Christian Center in Anaheim, California, which was one of the most significant charismatic congregations in the country at the time. In 1969 Pastor Ralph Wilkerson sought to purchase the Melodyland Theater, a 3,200-seat theater-in-the-round located across from Disneyland in order to convert it into a worship center. McNaughton, acting as chairman of the church's finance committee, was present alongside Wilkerson at the pivotal Anaheim City Council meeting. The council voted 4 to 1 to deny the church's application for use of the theater. The church ultimately prevailed, and the Melodyland Christian Center went on to draw up to 18,000 weekly attendees at its peak. McNaughton served as a deacon and elder of the congregation, as chairman of its finance committee, and as a member of the board of directors of the Melodyland School of Theology. McNaughton also served as vice president of Religious Heritage of America (RHA), a Washington, D.C.-based organization promoting the role of religion in American civic life. He and his wife Helen received the organization's first-ever Distinguished Service Award, presented in Washington, D.C., at the Washington Hilton Hotel International Ballroom Center, by W. Clement Stone, one of the wealthiest men in the country at the time. The ceremony was attended by notables including "Tennessee" Ernie Ford (as MC), Art Linkletter, singer Jeannie C. Riley, and singer Ethel Waters. He was also a member of Gov. Ronald Reagan's financial advisory board and the Orange County Lincoln Club. == Land development ==
Land development
By 1969, McNaughton had become a significant presence in the Antelope Valley, having developed 150 to 200 acres of residential and commercial property in the Palmdale and Lancaster area. He developed numerous buildings along the Antelope Valley Freeway and his offices headquartered there. He advertised land for sale in the Palmdale area in the Van Nuys News as early as 1968 and also ran for Palmdale City Council in 1970. During this period he also served as financial advisor for the Antelope Valley Lindsay Congressional Campaign, with the campaign headquartered in one of his buildings. By July 1989, the City Council approved McNaughton's specific plan 3 to 2. McNaughton, described in the Desert Sun as an Indian Wells developer, said: "I feel that I've more than performed everything I've promised to do. I'm delighted." The proposed development was described as a $2 billion resort on a 1,000-acre site, to be built in phases, including two 500-room hotels, three golf courses, a commercial office center, a recreational lake, and an RV resort park. The following month, in August 1989, McNaughton's plan was identified by the Desert Sun as "the largest development proposal in the city's history" encompassing approximately 1,000 acres with plans for 8,000 homes, two hotels, three golf courses, and a commercial office center. The project was formally designated the McNaughton Specific Plan. A 2004 retrospective in the Desert Sun recognized McNaughton for the foresight shown in securing this approval in 1988, with the site noted as offering some of the most spectacular views in the valley and credited as a contributor to the regional building boom. Foundation of La Entrada McNaughton's Coachella parcel attracted national attention in the late 1980s when televangelist Jim Bakker announced plans to purchase the land and develop a massive Christian resort complex. Bakker envisioned a 1,000-room hotel and a ministry destination to rival Heritage USA, his existing complex in South Carolina. By April 1988, Bakker's plans had stalled. With the Bakker deal abandoned, McNaughton moved forward with development himself. This was a course of action he had already been pursuing since at least 1986, when he had purchased the land and was actively seeking city annexation and approvals. Continuation After McNaughton's Death After Harold's death in 1996, his sons Dwight and Stanley McNaughton continued the family's development work in the area, including the 2,200 acres of east Coachella land their father had assembled. A 2004 Desert Sun profile of the major players in Coachella's development boom described how "the McNaughtons inherited thousands of acres of east Coachella land that their father, Harold, pieced together in the 1980s." As reported in the Desert Sun, Dwight, said of his father: "It was his dream to see a city out there. He doesn't get to see it, but it's still happening." In the years following Harold's death, the duo worked on accumulating more land, including a federal land exchange with the Bureau of Land Management. BLM officials agreed to the swap because the federal lands being conveyed were isolated sections considered difficult and uneconomical to manage. Their work culminated in an August 2001 when the Riverside County Local Agency Formation Committee approved the annexation of approximately 5,500 acres into the City of Coachella for the Desert Lakes project, a luxury golf community being developed by the brothers. The family eventually sold much of the assembled acreage to Fiesta Development Co. of Corona, which purchased 2,200 acres and developed plans for two golf courses, a shopping center, and 6,000 to 8,000 homes. == Philanthropy ==
Philanthropy
Vanguard University Business Program Harold and his wife Helen both attended what was then called Southern California College. His son Hal McNaughton was attending the university in 1971 with a desire to major in business, but no business department existed at the time. A lunch between Hal, Harold, and the university's then-president Emil A. Balliet led to the founding of the Business Program at the school. == Personal life ==
Personal life
McNaughton married Helen Rush on June 20, 1946, in Bakersfield. McNaughton served as Boone's personal representative during the 1987 PTL crisis, traveling to Heritage USA in Fort Mill, South Carolina, to convey Boone's willingness to serve as the new host of the PTL television program following Jim Bakker's removal. McNaughton was also referenced by Boone in his 1989 book The Miracle of Prayer, where Boone described McNaughton as a friend and referred to him as an example of prayer in secular business. He maintained a primary residence in Bakersfield for more than 50 years and a second residence in Palm Springs for more than 15 years. He died on August 17, 1996, at Kern County Medical Center in Bakersfield, at the age of 70. == References ==
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