Tom Ryan remembers cutting sod as a teenager on his family's farm in Blaine. He can picture the dirt roads that once characterized the area, even cows crossing the busy thoroughfare near his home.
It's a very different vision from present-day Blaine — which hits a major milestone today — as every last sod farm has disappeared, said Ryan, the city's longtime mayor.
Blaine became a city 50 years ago, on Dec. 3, 1964, and it's throwing itself a birthday bash from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. today, Dec. 3, 2014, at city hall.
The event kicks off a number of events that are in the works for the coming months, said Shari Kunza, program supervisor for the city's parks department. Those festivities will be unveiled at the party tonight, she said.
For Ryan — who will speak at the celebration — it's a bit surreal thinking back on things. He and his wife moved in next-door to his parents' homestead in 1969. Back then, the local banks "wouldn't loan to anyone out here. It's not an area that was ever supposed to happen," he said.
But a shift occurred, especially in the mid-1980s, as Blaine evolved from a "closed" to an "open community" — meaning that it became receptive to development, Ryan said. That's something he has lobbied for throughout the years.
In fact, over the past decade, a school, a day-care facility, bank and more have replaced his family's sod farm. If his parents were still alive, they "wouldn't recognize the place."
In Ryan's early days of working for the city, the population was in the 20,000s. Now it's over 60,000, and the city has become increasingly diverse. "We just continued to keep growing," Ryan said.