Written by Berie Grobe
This article was originally published in the June 2025 Issue of Coronado Magazine. To read this article and more from Coronado Magazine, click the button below.
Many wonder what it might have been like to live in Coronado during a simpler time. Just ask Susie (Susan Elizabeth) Vetter, known as โSusie with the laughing faceโ to friends, family, and others. She breathes life into everyoneโs day. โI donโt think of myself as very exciting, but my friends all say I am,โ she says with a recognizable chuckle and a twinkle in her eye. Susie is passionate about the City of Coronado, a trait once used to describe her late father, Dr. Paul Vetter, back when Capt. Al Ovrom headed the โVetter for Betterโ committee to support his candidacy for appointment as Mayor. To know Susie Vetter is to learn about Coronado during a simpler and happier time.
Susie was born and raised in Coronado during the peaceful years following World War II, before the bridge was built. Her stories evoke the wonder and magic of Crown City as a carefree village where children could thrive. Born on January 30, 1947, to Dr. William Paul Vetter and Dr. Ethel Waters Vetter, Susie was part of a loving family. Paul had retired from the Navy in 1942 and attended USC dental school, while Ethel continued her practice as a pediatrician in Coronado. Susie was one of three siblings, with an older sister, Christine (who eventually became a Superior Court Judge), and a younger brother, Loc (a renowned orthopedic surgeon). She laughingly characterizes herself as the โmiddle child,โ destined to find the world as a place where everything is fun. โThatโs what made children do well,โ Susie says. Coronado was a small village with no stop signs or traffic lights. Living across from the bay before the golf course was built, Susie and her siblings would walk to the waterโs edge and pretend they were walking into quicksand to see how far they could go. For fun, she and the friends would sneak out the window at night and run across Coronado dark. If a policeman went by, they would just hide in the bushes. Some nights they would sneak into the Del, where they would run around, invade the mattress room, and tell ghost stories before sneaking out again. Saturdays found her at the Village Theatre, where 50 cents would buy a movie plus popcorn and a Coke. She recalls Burt Kramer, the manager who tried to keep the kids in line and oversaw the many birthday parties there. Later, she remembers eating at a restaurant called Kayโs Chalet, the site of Coronado Lock & Key today, and the place of her first date with Richie Vernetti. Summers were spent at the Beach & Tennis Club at the Del, where swimming instructor โGeorgeโ taught kids to swim in the then saltwater pool. The family also attended the clubโs monthly parties.
Being a City Councilman and Mayorโs daughter was โexciting,โ but Susie was always โin troubleโ and found it hard to stay under the radar. She never liked being the center of attention, but those who know Susie will tell you that she definitely is just that. โHigh school was exciting,โ but her parents thought it was a bit too much, so they moved her to the Convent of Sacred Heart.
Susie went on to college but returned home to become her fatherโs dental assistant for 12 ยฝ years. She moved to Tierra Santa for a while until she gained enough equity to purchase her own condo at The Monterey, her parentsโ first home in Coronado. She volunteered at the Coronado Historical Association until she became a San Diego Old Town Trolley driver for 11 years. Of that, she laughingly says, โI loved talking to people about Coronado because I spent half of my life at the Hotel Del misbehaving.โ She then adds, โI also loved doing that because you have people coming from all over the world to learn about your city… it was a beautiful experience.โ
Susie served as the President of the Coronado Womenโs Golf Association, President of the San Diego Council of Ski Clubs, and even spent a few years on the lawn bowling green. With her love of the Crown City, she designed and wears a crown necklace and earrings. Her golf cart and lawn bowls both bear a crown logo. โI am so passionate about my city. Itโs my home. When I lived in Tierra Santa, every time I crossed the bridge to see my mother, I would say to myself, Iโve just got to get back here. So, when they were converting The Monterey to condominiums, I was the first to buy.โ
Susie would tell her mischievous 16-year-old self, โBelieve in yourself and keep your friends close, because I know how important that is.โ She can now be found strolling the beach with her labradoodle, Jersey Girl, strolling the beach with all the friends. If you do, invite her to sit on a bench with you and regale you with many more stories of early Coronado and all her friends.
True to its mission to serve as Coronadoโs primary center for community history, the Coronado Historical Association (CHA) conducts educational and research programs about Coronadoโs history and people.
More photos of Susie Vetter:












