San Jose Chamber of Commerce honors its history, aims toward the future – The Mercury News Today Us News


When you’re a 140-year-old organization like the San Jose Chamber of Commerce, it can be a challenge to strike the right balance between honoring the group’s history and staying relevant for the 21st century.

The chamber pulled that off pretty well Thursday night at its Leaders and Legacy dinner, attended by nearly 500 people at the Signia by Hilton hotel in downtown San Jose.

The history part was easy: The chamber honored the Normandin family, which has been selling transportation of one kind or another to the Santa Clara Valley since 1875. Amable Normandin buggy-manufacturing shop opened 150 years ago and then did a very Silicon Valley thing and pivoted when cars came along a few decades later. Now, the multi-generation business occupies a landmark spot on San Jose’s auto row on Capitol Expressway. There’s even an original Normandin buggy from 1882 on the roof — a subtle reminder that the Normandin in the name is older than Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram or Fiat.

The presentation of the Legacy Leader Award also gave the chamber and audience an opportunity to remember Lon Normandin, who died at age 91 in December 2025. Chamber CEO Leah Toeniskoetter noted that in addition to running the family business, he deepened the family’s civic engagement — helping found Heritage Bank of Commerce and supporting Catholic education causes as well as social service organizations like Martha’s Kitchen, where he remained a regular volunteer into his later years.

“The Normandin name has come to represent not only entrepreneurial success but generosity in community leadership,” Toeniskoetter said. “In a region often defined by what is new and next, the Normandins remind us that endurance, integrity and long-term commitment matter just as much as innovation.”

Rob Lindo, left, who served as chair of the San Jose Chamber of Commerce in 2025, welcomes Ed Davis, the 2026 chair, at the chamber's Leaders and Legacy dinner, held at the Signia by Hilton hotel in downtown San Jose on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group)
Rob Lindo, left, who served as chair of the San Jose Chamber of Commerce in 2025, welcomes Ed Davis, the 2026 chair, at the chamber’s Leaders and Legacy dinner, held at the Signia by Hilton hotel in downtown San Jose on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group) 

Staying with the historic theme, immediate past board chair Rob Lindo and current chair Ed Davis invited several of their predecessors to the stage to help raise $100,000 for the Bob Kieve Chamber Building Preservation Foundation. It seemed like a tall order, but they managed it in a matter of minutes, helped by a $35,000 anonymous matching gift, $10,000 contributions from Davis and developer David Neale, $5,000 from the Swenson Foundation and $25,000 from the Toeniskoetter Family Foundation.


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