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The Navy League of the United States is a recognized non-profit organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Contributions are tax deductible as otherwise provided by law.
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Mouney C. "Pfeff" Pfefferkorn
Council's Founding Father Remembered On Councils 65th Anniversary
Sixty-five years ago, soon after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the San Diego Council of the Navy League was founded. The man who made that happen was Mouney C. Pfefferkorn
and he was our first President and he is our President Emeritus. Known as “Pfeff” to those with whom he worked and to those he served, was nicknamed “Mr. Navy” by the Secretary of the
Navy during the 1950’s. Born in Vienna, Austria in 1880, Pfeff immigrated to the United States in 1902 and, soon after, enlisted in our Navy. He served on a coal burning torpedo boat
destroyer, the USS Paul Jones, in gunnery and was discharged as a Chief Yeoman in 1907. Upon discharge he joined the Southern California First National Bank as a bookkeeper and their
ninth employee.
He would retire from that company fifty years later as Vice President, Foreign Relations when they had over two hundred employees. Pfeff was an avid sportsman and became a football
coach at San Diego High School and was instrumental in raising funds to construct their stadium that was one of the largest for a high school in the country. In 1915, now married with two
children, he assisted in fund raising and organization for the Panama California Exposition.
Pfeff’s interests were numerous and his energies must have been boundless. He helped form the San Diego Symphony Orchestra and served as their president in the early 1930’s. He
worked to create the San Diego Civic Music Association and the Civic Light Opera. His sports interests led him to start a branch of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) in San Diego and served
as the President. The San Diego Historical Society has a photo of Pfeff with Florence Chadwick soon after her record-breaking swim. His fundraising and organizational talents helped
to ensure the success of the 1935 California Pacific International Exposition.
Around his long time Mission Hills home, he and his wife, Edith, grew award-winning dahlias among other beautiful plants and flowers. The attraction to dahlias led Pfeff to also start the Dahlia
Society of San Diego.
As a banker, Pfeff, was a complete professional. He served four times as the President of the San Diego Clearing House Association. His foresight to look beyond our borders to
provide international solutions for clients earned him much respect and admiration.
Pfeff always maintained an interest in and affection for the Navy that had been his first U.S. home. He worked with the teams that lobbied Washington to establish a significant Navy presence
here in San Diego. His work with and for the Navy covered many aspects beyond the Navy League. He was honored as the top recruiter during the late 1940’s and received the Navy
Meritorious Service Citation in 1954.
In 1957, Pfeff was surprised and honored with a luncheon attended by two hundred coworkers, friends, admirers, and dignitaries. The occasion was his 77th birthday and his retirement after
fifty years with the bank. He received congratulatory notes from Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Ernie Pyle, Arthur Marston, James Copley, Mayor Harley Knox,
and many others. In 1957, The California Assembly passed House resolution 107 in his honor. The County of San Diego Board of Supervisors passed a similar resolution.
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