Author: Michael Dobkins

  • November 6th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1946, the new Girl Scout clubhouse located on the corner of Seventh Street and Electric Avenue was dedicated.

    Seal Beach Mayor Louis J. Jaeckel officiated the ceremony with troop leaders Sue Lieurance, Dorothy Henkey, Mildred C. Sprauss, and Joy Morris. Further assistances was provided by Reverend Bruce Ellis of the Seal Beach Community Church and youth activities director A. Melvin Strong.

    The culmination of two and a half years of community effort, the clubhouse was a prefabricated building installed on land donated by the city. A glass jar containing a list of Girl Scout members and a history of their fundraising efforts that raised more than $2000 was buried on site as a “cornerstone” for the new clubhouse.

    Unlike many landmarks of Seal Beach’s history, the Seal Beach Girl Scout clubhouse still stands today and in use. Generations of Girl Scouts and Brownies have visited the clubhouse throughout the decades since the dedication. The building was renovated and expanded in 1957 as covered in this August 18th post. Whether or not the glass jar was recovered during this renovation is unknown.

    You can find out more about today’s Girl Scouts of Orange County by clicking here.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • November 5th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1961, the Seal Beach Republican Women’s Federation conducted a home tour of five Seal Beach homes and gardens, each decorated in either a Thanksgiving or Christmas holiday theme.

    The tour started at 2 p.m. in the garden of Dorothy Henkey at 706 Ocean Avenue. Transportation to the other homes on the tour was offered to anyone who registered in advance with Charlotte Shuman of 204 Ocean Avenue.

    Also on the tour were the homes of Captain and Mrs. Russell Grotomat at 11 Bolsa Street, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Buffum at 450 Ocean Avenue, Commander and Mrs. A.H. Sleeth at 404 Ocean Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lusk at 1530 Crestview Avenue. A highlight of the tour was a five foot dome designed and built by Mrs. Sleeth.

    Mrs. M.L Johnstone, chairman of the committee that organized the tour told a Los Angeles Times reporter that refreshments were to be served during the tour by Mrs. Robert Osborne, Mrs. Dorian Boyd, Virginia Tessier, Mrs. Roy Jensen, Mrs. James Bonar, Mrs. R. Smith, and Mrs. James Harbison.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • November 3rd in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1929, William F. Crawford demonstrated his powered glider at the Crawford Airport at 1 p.m..

    The Crawford Glider was powered by a forty-horse power Szekley motor with a two gallon tank and a 47-feet wide wingspan that was foldable for easy ground transport. It flew at speeds between forty and fifty miles per hour, could ascend to a height of 10,000 feet, and required only 1/5 of the time and space a traditional aircraft used to take off. Crawford expected to sell his gliders for $800.

    Crawford leased the land at what is today Pacific Coast Highway and Seal Beach Boulevard to establish an airfield, a hangar, and manufacturing facilities in 1927.

    Click here to visit a Getty Images page with video of the Crawford Glider in action. I can’t confirm it completely, but this does appear to filmed at Crawford Field.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • November 3rd in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1941, the Santa Ana Register reported that Letitia Dahlgren had been elected president of the Seal Beach Sub-Deb club, replacing Audrey Snell.

    Letitia Dahlgren

    Dahlgren’s supporting officers were vice-president Marjorie Crow, treasurer Coralie Crow, and press chairman Georgia Hayley (who probably was responsible for the report and above photo of President Dahlgren being published.

    The report also stated that a meeting had recently been held at the home of Carley Draheim. All of these young ladies were students at Huntington Beach High School.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • November 2nd in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1973, the Long Beach Independent’s Your Guide To Dining and Entertainment with Tedd Thomey ran this photo of Green Pepper restaurant owner, Henry Lucero. (I think most people in town knew him as “Hank.”)

    The microfilm reproduction of this photo is poor, but it’s hard to pass up a chance at sharing another look at Hank’s face. He and his restaurant is still fondly remembered by long time Seal Beach residents. I only wish I had the original non-grainy version of this photo.

    And as long as we’re unashamedly being nostalgic for gone but not forgotten people and places, I’d like to point out the artwork behind Hank. For years as a regular patron of the Green Pepper, first with my family and later as a young adult, I’d look at that painting on my way to a table or while waiting to pick up an order. It was once a familiar part of the Green Pepper interior, but I hadn’t thought of it for nearly three decades. I’m missing it terribly because it represents so many fond memories of people and experiences long past.

    Ah, well. Nostalgia ain’t what it used to be. There’s another post featuring a Green Pepper ad here.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • November 1st in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1916, The Chatham Record in Pittsboro, North Carolina ran the following story under the headline of “NOVEL ILLUMINATION:

    The city of Seal Beach, Cal., is now attracting attention because of the novel idea of illuminating the entire water front which has been carried out by the officials. A battery of 41 powerful searchlights, each being of more than 25,000-candle power, has been placed on the outward edge of a long pier which extends out into the ocean from a point at the center of the water front. The illuminated water front may be seen far out at sea, while the searchlight beams are visible for miles Inland.

    The Chatham was the first of sixty-five newspapers across ten states outside California that published the same exact story over the next three weeks, ending with The Pryor Creek Clipper in Pryor, Oklahoma and the Cawker City Public Record in (where else?) Cawker City, Kansas on November 23. It’s likely there were other newspapers that ran the story, but their archives are not online.

    This is an impressive achievement for whoever was handling Seal Beach publicity in 1916 — especially when you consider those sixty-five identical stories against the mere thirty-seven stories mentioning Seal Beach in out-of-state newspapers (at least in the online newspaper archive I use) during the previous twelve months. The story probably originated as a press release or a news wire story and was picked up nationally.

    The illumination highlighted in the story comes from the scintillator that was installed at the end of the Seal Beach pier. The scintillator was transported down to Seal Beach from the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (PPIE) that was held in San Francisco in 1915. 

    (One would expect a publicist to push to have the PPIE connection and the “scintillator” name in the “Novel Illumination” story to enhance the glamor of the attraction. Maybe the PPIE was passé by late 1916.)

    The PPIE figures prominently in the early promotion of Seal Beach after the city incorporated in October 1915. Even before the exposition closed in December 2015, bombastic announcements were proclaiming that many of the PPIE attractions and acts would relocate to Seal Beach the next year. Only a few of those promised attractions made it to Seal Beach, most prominently the roller coaster and the scintillator — and even those were scaled back versions of the San Francisco installations.

    The scintillator at the end of the Seal Beach pier did not use the 48-inch spotlight lamps from the PPIE scintillator located along the San Francisco waterfront during the PPIE. Instead, the smaller 16-inch lamps that were used to highlight the 435-foot Tower of Jewels building that stood at the center of the exposition grounds were purchased for Seal Beach. (And I count forty-seven spotlights, not forty-one as reported in the “Novel Illumination” story.)

    Although the Seal Beach scintillator was smaller and did not the have the projection reach of the PPIE scintillator, the effect was still stunning and definitely nothing like it had ever been seen in Orange County. For many tourists to Seal Beach during this period, the scintillator light show was the high point of their visit.

    There is no film of the Seal Beach scintillator in action, but this black and white night time footage from the Keystone film, “Mabel and Fatty Viewing the World’s Fair at San Francisco” shows what the Seal Beach night sky looked like in 1916 – albeit on a much less grand scale.

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTku0yHFS_U?start=426&w=560&h=315]

    Now imagine those same spotlight beams filling the night with color.

    The San Francisco scintillator was just one element in the spectacularly innovative lighting on display across the entire exposition. The exposition lighting, designed by Walter D’Arcy Ryan, the director of General Electric’s Illuminating Engineering Laboratory, utilized a variety of illumination effects, and photos, postcards, and film footage can only give a taste of what the fair lighting looked like in real life. Ryan described the San Francisco scintillator in a presentation to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in 1916:

    The scintillator consisted of combining searchlights in systematic drill in colored and white beams with smoke and steam, so as to produce spectacular effects or tireless fireworks, both aerial and on the ground, possessing artistic color combinations and blendings impossible with ordinary fireworks. This was further enhanced by the running of a large express locomotive at high speed under brake so as to produce large volumes of smoke and steam which were illuminated in color. Other steam effects were in the form of fans, plumes, wheels, fighting serpents, etc.

    The Seal Beach scintillator remained a major feature of Seal Beach advertising until 1919 and then disappeared from newspapers except for historical profiles of Seal Beach’s wild past, and I can find no mention of their being used beyond that year.

    A century later I can’t help longing for a modern-day scintillator to be installed at the end of the Seal Beach pier and use modern technology to duplicate or exceed the night sky spectacle that once brought thousands to the Seal Beach shore.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • October 31st in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1938, Halloween was celebrated with plenty of “Whoopee” and fun at Vivian Laird’s Garden of Allah on the coast highway at Seal Beach. 

    There was also “Whoopee” and fun at Vivian Laird’s South Seas, located between Santa Ana and Anaheim, but we all know that Seal Beach’s Halloween “Whoopee” and fun was (and is) the best.

    – Michael Boo!-kins


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  • October 30th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1979, The Gold Mine, located at 218 1/2 Main Street ran this ad in the Los Angeles Times with the enticing slogan of “Now selling gold the way it should be sold  by weight.”

    Today Ebb Persephone fulfills all your new age gift needs at this address. 

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • October 29th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1977, the shops on Main Street held an Old Fashioned Sidewalk Sale from 9 a.m. to dusk.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • October 28th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1929, the new Seal Beach city hall was officially opened and dedicated at 8th Street and Central Avenue in a gala ceremony.

    After a narrowly defeated bond election in 1928 and a second successful bond of $50,000 at the end of January 1929, the City of Seal Beach managed to pick an architect, choose a building site, and construct the new fireproof city hall building in nine short months (with delays that pushed the expected September 1st opening and celebration to October 29.)

    Fresh and brand new in 1929

    The dedication program included:

    • The Dick Rogers orchestra (probably the Llewellyn Orchestra)
    • Opening prayer and blessing by Reverend D. W. Wilt
    • Presentation of Building by Horace W. Austin
    • Receipt of building by Mayor R. E. Dolly
    • Flag presentation and salute of the U.S. Flag by the Junior Police, directed by Chief of Police Andy Johnson
    • Song by the grammar school glee club
    • Introduction of distinguished guests
    • Baritone solo by Jimmie McGarrigle

    Guests were escorted through the building by the junior police, and refreshments were served by the Woman’s Club of Seal Beach.

    From the main entrance on 8th Street a long hallway stretched to the back of the building. On the left, the clerical offices for the city clerk, recorder, engineer, auditor and courtroom.

    Beyond the clerical offices (but still on the left), stood the police department’s rooms, including a private office for the chief of police, the squad room, and a examining room for prisoners. 

    At the rear, the fire department took up the first floor with sleeping quarters for the firemen above on the second floor. The first floor housed the city’s firefighting equipment, including a brand new American LaFrance 500-gallon pump truck and the old chemical firetruck and a wide door opened out on to Central Avenue for speedy exits to emergencies.

    A more modern view of the fire department section of the 1929 city hall with vintage fire engines.

    To the right of the entrance, the library was equipped with ample shelf space and two reading rooms, one for the adults and one for children. Just beyond that was the jail with three double cell and one single for men and four cells for women.

    The floors of the offices were hardwood, and the jail and fire department had concrete floors.  Brand new furniture for the city treasurer’s office, the water and street department, and the police department had been  provided under a contract awarded to the Pacific Desk Company in Long Beach on October 24th, and city library had already moved to the new building on October 18th.

    The second floor, except for the sleeping quarters at the rear for the fire department, was used as a city auditorium and a city council meeting room. This also had a hardwood floor that would serve well for dances and banquets. A portrait of President Hoover hung at the end of the auditorium.

    At the rear of the building, there was a six-car garage for municipal use and confiscated cars.

    The reception committee members for the dedication were C. O Wheat (commitee chair), Father Raley,  Mrs. William Taylor (PTA President), Mrs. E. W. Reed (Woman’s Club President), and Reverend D. W. Wilt and W. D. Miller.

    The other significant historical event on October 29th, 1929, was Black Tuesday, the culmination of the Wall Street Crash of 1929, and the beginning of the 12-year worldwide Great Depression. (Who says it’s impossible to sum up extremely complicated historical events in a few broad brushstrokes of simple description?)

    Great Depression aside, the new city hall was a smashing success for this era of Seal Beach history. The building lasted as a functional city hall for forty years before being expanded in 1969 (the library had moved across the street in 1962) and is still functioning today, housing SBTV, the Miss Seal Beach office, and the Chamber of Commerce.

    A Google Street View of the 1929 city hall building in March 2016

    All in all, a vast improvement over renting space in the Labourdette Building on Main Street.

    The original City Hall rented space in the Labourdette building in Seal Beach

    (Special thanks to Robin Fort-Lincke of SBTV for sharing some of the background and images in this post.)

    – Michael Dobkins


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