Museum wins Harvey Cowell Business of the Year Award

Gail Fornasiere of the Catalina Island Museum accepting the Harvey Cowell Business of the Year award at the Catalina Island Chamber of Commerce and Vistors Bureau’s annual meeting and installation dinner at last week. Courtesy photo

The Catalina Island Chamber of Commerce and Visitor’s Bureau announced this week that the Catalina Island Museum has won a prestigious business award for 2018.

The Harvey Cowell Business of the Year Award is given in honor of Harvey Cowell, one of 15 visionary businessmen who on June 2, 1949 founded the Avalon Catalina Island Chamber of Commerce.

Cowell was the proprietor of Island Pharmacy, was a prominent leader of the Catalina Island business community, served as an Avalon City Council member and mayor, and remained active in the community until his death at age 98 in March 2011. The Harvey Cowell Business of the Year Award was established to recognize an extraordinary contribution by a business to the furtherance of tourism to Avalon and Catalina Island.

This year, nine businesses were nominated by Chamber members. The nominated businesses were:

• Café Metropole

• Catalina Diving History Exhibit

• Catalina Express

• Catalina Island Museum

• Catalina Laundry

• Catalina Tours

• Joe’s Rent A Boat

• Mountain & Sea Adventures

• Overlook Hall

Gail Fornasiere, the museum’s sales and marketing director said the facility was honored to win the award. According to the Chamber, the Museum was nominated because since opening its new facility in July 2016, it has played host to the world-class exhibition of Dale Chihuly’s work, the first exhibition of Mexican art on Catalina Island highlighting José Guadalupe Posada, French travel posters and photographs by Bunny Yeager. Currently the museum is featuring the first-ever exhibition about the making of the movie Jaws and another about Harry Houdini and the on-island filming of “Terror Island,” both of which link local history and lore to the subjects on display. Since opening the museum has drawn nearly 200,000 visitors through its doors and brought immeasurable media attention to the Island.