Category: Uncategorized

  • February 5th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1961, Seal Beachers seeking high styling and tinting needed only to visit Eleanor for Beauty for fulfillment, according to this ad in the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram. Feb_5_Eleanor_for_Beauty_AdIf you drop by Eleanor for Beauty’s location today, the salon is long gone, but you can console your unstyled and untinted self with a thin crust pie from Slice Of New York Pizza.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • February 4th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1973, the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram ran this ad for garden apartments in Seal Beach Leisure World:

    Feb_4_1973_Leisure_World_Ad– Michael Dobkins

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  • February 3rd In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1966, Long Beach Independent society editor, Iola Masterson, reported that a housewarming party given for Kenny and Dorris Martinson in their new College Park home was “a swinging surprise.” Their daughter, Linda, schemed with party planners Mariam and George Irwin and Lois and Dr. Les Watson to surprise her parents by arriving unannounced just as the Martinson family was departing for a local restaurant, the Hunting Horn, where Linda had “made reservations.”

    Caught between wanting to be polite but also worried about being late for the dining reservations, Kenny and Dorris were further surprised when a predetermined signal was given and a gang of thirty party-goers rushed from hiding spots in parked cars to ambush the new College Park residents with gag gifts, food and “all the fixings for a happy hour.”

    Among the ambushing neighbors were Al and Marge Davis, Howell and Vyrle Honeywell, Mac and Jane Epley, Smitty and June Crain, Bud and Joyce Holton, and Nerrill and Phyllis Scott.

    In addition to the gag gifts, Kenny and Dorris Martinson were given a $50 gift certificate and $15 in cash. They planned to use the cash to buy and plant a tree to commemorate the friendship and fun of the surprise housewarming evening.

    How Iola Masterson got “swinging” from any of that remains a mystery.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • February 2nd In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1954, two Marines, Leroy Grant and Sgt. Jack Yasser, entered the Motorome motel office at Twelfth Street and Pacific Coast Highway and demanded money from owner Luke W. Purdue at gunpoint. When they forced him into a second room where the money was kept, Purdue’s wife, Bertha ran from the room.

    Motorome MotelOne of the gunmen started after her, but Purdue blocked their way. “You’ve gone far enough,” he said.

    The two would-be robbers turned and fled. Purdue grabbed his .38 revolver and shot four times. Yasser fell and dropped his .45 automatic before getting to his feet to escape with his partner.

    Hours later, Grant and Yasser were arrested at the Santa Ana Lighter-Than-Air Base after Yasser visited the base dispensary for treatment of bullet wounds to his right elbow and hip.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • February 1st In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1929, S. B. Ablis of Long Beach and Clide Maupin of Maywood were detained in the Seal Beach city jail for driving while intoxicated. Displeased by having their Friday night adventures cut short, the two men set fire to a pile of magazines and papers that were left in the jail for prisoners. They also turned on the water faucets and flooded their cell. After the smoke alert officers in the jail to the situation, the fire was extinguished and the faucets were tightened shut.

    Once again, the two drunks were left alone to sober up, but before that could happen, they set fire to the bedding and the mattresses in their cell. After this blaze was doused, the police officers wisely confiscated tobacco and matches from the two prisoners.

    The next day Mr. Ablis and Mr. Maupin not only suffered from what were probably terrible hangovers, but they were also fined for their antics by Judge Wilson.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • January 31st In Seal Beach History

    sealsOn this date in 1924, the Santa Ana Register reported under the headline of “SEAL BEACH REGRETS WAR ON PACIFIC SEALS” that a war against seals was advocated by fishermen due to the seals destroying too many nets and feasting “too liberally upon fish meant for human consumption.”

    This annihilation of the seals was opposed in Seal Beach. The Santa Ana Register added that the “tourists and residents of Seal Beach would deeply regret to lose their companionship and the added attraction of their presence on the sand spit which they chose long years ago as the finest sun parlor on the Pacific.”

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • January 30th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1924, a newly reorganized Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce meet under the direction of president C. J. Smith. The school orchestra opened the meeting with several musical selections.

    Dr. Everett Reed requested that Mrs. Padrick, city clerk, and I. C. Smith, a Los Angeles manufacturer and Seal Beach resident, assist him on the committee of industry and manufacture.

    H.W. Raymer of the entertainment committee suggested that a banquet be held to promote interest and sociability.

    C. M. Conlee brought to the chamber’s attention some much-needed public improvements, such as a school bond issue, a public restroom, street names installed on curbs, and a new city hall (it would take over five years for this suggestion to become a reality) .

    F. L. Wilson also suggested that air transportation to Seal Beach would soon become a reality.

    Finally, J. C. Putnam reported that every business firm in Seal Beach with one or two exceptions had joined and that number of members of the reinvigorated Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce would surpass one hundred before the meeting adjourned. 

    All this was reported under a Santa Ana Register headline of “SEAL BEACH TO BACK CHAMBER WITH VIM.” We don’t see much vim around town nowadays.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • January 29th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1914, a deed was recorded transferring 13.85 acres owned by Isaac W. Hellman to Guy M. Rush. The property joined Seal Beach (formerly Bay City) on the East (just past 14th Street) and stood between the Pacific Electric red car tracks (Electric Avenue) and the high tide line. This property was divided into lots and was given the exotic name of “tract no. 1.”

    The streets of tract no. 1 were more colorfully named with a nautical theme: Dolphin Avenue,  Seal Way, and Marine Avenue. The already existing Ocean Avenue  curved through tract no. 1 to meet Bay Boulevard (later renamed Seal Beach Boulevard). After Tent City and the Joy Zone were replaced by more housing, Seal Way was extended westward beyond 14th Street.

    The mortgage on the entire property was a whopping $ 44,015.

    This 1921 aerial view shows Seal Beach seven years after the sale of the lot:

    The triangle spotlights the boundaries of Tract no. 1.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • January 28th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1937, the Santa Ana Register reported that members of the Anaheim Bay post of the American Legion has unanimously agreed to submit themselves to blood tests and classification at a local hospital. Commander Ray Moffitt had recommend this action so that members’ blood classifications would already be on record to speed up the process if blood transfusions ever were needed. Post publicity chairman T. L. Burns reported that Commander Moffitt would head a delegation of the first twelve men for the test that week.

    – Michael Dobkins

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  • January 27th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1925, the Santa Ana Register reported that John Doyle, “said to be a former mayor of Seal Beach” (the newspaper’s odd choice of words, not ours), would face Justice of the Peace and City Recorder William Morrison. City Marshal Jack Arnold had seized liquor and what appeared to be a bootlegging outfit from Doyle’s home.

    Miss Elsie McClellan, a Seal Beach correspondent for a Long Beach newspaper had a confrontation with Doyle earlier and had sworn out a complaint against him for disorderly conduct after Doyle “cussed” her.  An active member of Seal Beach’s Women’s Improvement Club, Miss McClellan had been helping a female friend search for her father, and the friend felt that Doyle was hiding the father.

    Whether “bootlegging outfit” meant a still, a bathtub gin set-up, or evidence of a Prohibition-defying booze distribution ring is impossible to discover over ninety years later, but City Marshal Arnold shared that “wild parties” at the Doyle residence had led recently to complaints from neighbors.

    There is no follow-up to this oddly phrased Santa Ana Register article, so the outcome of Doyle’s appearance before Morrison remains unknown. Why the editors felt it important to run a story the day before Doyle’s day in court, but not to cover Morrison’s judgement on the case is also a mystery.

    Also, there is no further indication one way or another that Elsie McClellan’s friend found her father or not or where he was hiding.

    We can confirm that a John Doyle involved in the often contentious local political scene during Seal Beach’s first decade as a city and was, in fact, elected mayor in April of 1920 and successfully battled a recall effort in August of the same year. All of these were events covered in the Santa Ana Register, making the “said to be a former mayor of Seal Beach” phrase even odder.

    Beyond his time as Mayor, John J. Doyle had a varied history in Seal Beach. The 1918 Coast Cities Directory lists him as working as the secretary of the Seal Beach Concession Company and living at 8th Street and Central Avenue.  In January 1920, a census taker recorded that 63 year-old John J. Doyle, a shipyard boiler maker, lived with his 30-year old wife Alice at 129 Dolphin Avenue.

    This is just speculation, but perhaps Doyle’s skills as a boiler maker came in handy for constructing and maintaining stills for homemade hooch.

    A 1925 city directory, the year of his bootlegging arrest, shows that Doyle and Alice lived at 210 10th Street. According to Zillow, the house was built in 1922 and still stands today. Doyle seems to have moved his residence quite a bit, but it seems likely that this is the address where the booze was seized.

    In the thirties, city directories listed John Doyle as an employee at the Skipper’s Chowder House in Sunset Beach, a notorious local spot for bootlegging during prohibition that continued to have liquor law troubles well into the 1940s.

    – Michael Dobkins

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