Jeremy Dennis Hass passed away unexpectedly on June 30, 2014, at his home in Santa Barbara, California.

Jeremy Hass was a longtime volunteer with the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation and played an integral in the restoration of the Santa Barbara Presidio.
Jeremy Hass was a longtime volunteer with the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation and played an integral in the restoration of the Santa Barbara Presidio. Credit: Hass family photo

Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on March 24, 1936, Jeremy was the eldest son of Margaret Gray Hass and John Kelleher Hass. As a Mayflower descendant, he was proud of his Irish, Scottish and Schleswig-Holstein forbears.

Jeremy spent his early years in St. Paul, Minnesota, before his family moved west. His father was an attorney and intelligence officer at the U.S. Marine Corps air base in Goleta, California, during World War II. The family made Santa Barbara a permanent home after the war.

John Hass was the founding partner in the law firm Weldon & Hass. Margaret, Jeremy’s mother, was employed as a court reporter.

Jeremy attended Goleta Union School, Dolores and San Roque parochial schools, and graduated from Santa Barbara Catholic High School in 1954.

He then attended Pomona College, where he majored in economics-engineering with a minor in history, before going on to Hastings College of Law in San Francisco, and Loyola University in Los Angeles.

He was admitted to the California State Bar and joined the family law firm. Jeremy retired from the firm in 2001.

On April 24, 1976, Jeremy married Ada Pinga at Mission Santa Bárbara after being introduced by a mutual friend.

A year and half later they gave birth to their beloved daughter, Melinda. They remained a devoted couple and celebrated their 38th anniversary this year.

In the mid-1960s, while working for Jules Brasseur at Santa Barbara Title Co., Jeremy became interested in the Presidio project, a historic site in downtown Santa Barbara.

He plotted the boundaries of the old fortress by studying historic property documents. By 1967 he was an active volunteer at the Presidio project, which conducted archaeological excavations and public events at the site.

In early 1971, Jeremy wrote a proposal for the future Presidio project at he request of Pearl Chase and the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation. For the next several decades Jeremy played a major part in property acquisitions for what became El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park.

He was instrumental in the gift of El Paseo and Casa De la Guerra to the SBTHP. In the 1990s, while a member of the SBTHP’s Mills Committee, he helped arrange the trust’s purchase of the Santa Inés Mission Mills.

Always a student of history and cultures, Jeremy presented papers at a number of conferences. His intensive research on the subjects of waterworks, fulling mills, and of California pioneer Joseph Chapman contributed not only to his own publications, but to the academic field — providing source material for scholarly research on the subject by others.

Prior to and during his retirement, Jeremy loved collecting and restoring antique cars. He was a past president of the Antique Automobile Club of America and a member of the Horseless Carriage Club.

Over the last several years, Jeremy made a monthly appearance on History Friday for Baron Ron Herron’s radio show.

Jeremy’s involvement with organizations included sitting on the boards of the California Chapter of the American Irish Historical Society, the Sons of the American Revolution, California Mission Studies Association, and the Scholarship Foundation of the Filipino Community Association.

He was a member of the State Bar of California and the Santa Barbara County Bar Association.

Jeremy joined the Santa Barbara Corral of the Westerners International in 1976 and served as sheriff (president) in 1986-1987.

Following in the footsteps of his father, Jeremy provided legal advice to the local Filipino Community Association. Jeremy served on the Santa Barbara Sister Cities Board of Directors and was active in the San Juan Metro Manila/Santa Barbara Sister City Association.

Three years ago he organized and formed the nonprofit Early California Agriculture and Technology Society (ECATS).

Jeremy was a life honorary director of the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation. He received the 2000 SBTHP Pearl Chase Historic Preservation and Conservation Award.

In 2004, he was presented the Bayanihan Spirit Award by the Filipino-American Community Association of Goleta and Santa Barbara. In 2013 he was given the President’s Award of the California Mission Studies Association.

Jeremy is survived by his loving wife, Ada; his adored daughter, Melinda “M’Lynn” Judith Hass; his brother, Mike Hass; nephew Todd; and two grand-nephews, Kurt and Ryan; as well as scores of admiring and bereaved friends.

A tribute and vigil will be held at 6:30 p.m. July 10 in the Presidio Chapel of El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park, 123 E. Canon Perdido. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. July 11 at Welch-Ryce-Haider Funeral Chapel, 15 E. Sola St.

A funeral mass will take place at 9 a.m. July 12 at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church, 21 E. Sola St.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation with a notation of “restricted to support of Santa Ines Mission Mills,” 123 E. Canon Perdido, Santa Barbara 93101.

Arrangements are by Welch-Ryce-Haider Funeral Chapels.