Category: Uncategorized

  • September 26th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Mike Collins spoke to a jubilant crowd at the North American Rockwell (now Boeing) plant in Seal Beach across Bay Boulevard (now Seal Beach Boulevard) from where the second stage Saturn rockets were assembled. 

    Neil Armstrong had become the first man to walk on the moon a little over two months earlier on July 20, 1969, but he was already looking to a future where larger space vehicles would allow for cooperative missions with both U.S. and Russian astronauts. He felt that manned space flights were “good mediums” for cooperation between nations. 

    When asked if the Apollo 11 crew had heard from the Flat Earth Society about the moon landing, Armstrong joked that Mike Collins had suggested sending in applications.

    Armstrong and Collins then left by helicopter to attend a celebration in Downey where the Apollo capsules were built.  


    Also my baby brother Matt was born on this date in 1969.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • September 25th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1960, the following photograph was published in the Long Beach Independent’s fashion section.

    There were a number of photos showing off current fashions available at local shops, but this ensemble was available at Seal Beach’s very own Village Bazaar, located at 137 1/2 Main Street.

    As the Long Beach Independent caption copy writer so enticingly put it:

    PICCOLO STRIPES set of gay capris by Pants Internationale. One hundred per cent wool and fully lined. Sizes 8-16 are perfect with knit wool tops, and come in assorted colors. Serape wrap completing outfit is hand-loomed Mexican Imports discovery. 


    Is it wrong to want capris and serape wraps to come back into style? 

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • September 19th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1914, this oddly laid-out advertisement ran in the now defunct Los Angeles Evening Express. The same ad was published the next day in the Los Angeles Times.

    The “Seal Beach” name had been launched to replace the more generic “Bay City” in July 1913, and this ad was part of a real estate promotional push that culminated in Seal Beach citizens voting to incorporate as a city in October 1915. It provides a snapshot of how Seal Beach was being pitched to the real estate buying public after two summers and fourteen months under the new name.

    Nature has done much for Seal Beach for the western portion of the city lies on a high bluff overlooking the Pacific ocean just like the Palisades at Santa Monica, and like the Palisades at Santa Monica, it has a rich sandy loam soil which makes it especially desirable for homes of the better class, and besides, this section of the city has great natural advantages over the Palisades at Santa Monica because it overlooks, in addition to the blue waters of the Pacific, the beautiful Alamitos Bay, whose waters wind in and out among the beautiful environs of Naples.

    The eastern part of Seal Beach slopes gently down to the waters of the ocean on the south and the delightful waters of Anaheim Bay on the east, and by many this is considered the most desirable section for investment as it is close to the bath house, dancing pavilion and main business portion of the city, and also is the part where most improvements and new buildings are going up. Great changes have taken place in this portion of the city since the Guy M. Rush Company, who are the sole agents for Seal Beach became interested in the city. The sand dunes have been graded off and the sand used to fill in a section where it was not quite so high. Miles of graded streets have been put in, while excellent cement sidewalks and curbs are in evidence on both sides of these streets.

    This is also the section where most all of the improvements have been made during the past year, houses and buildings of different kinds having gone up on all sides, some of the homes being mansions equal to those found in Los Angeles and other larger and older cities. The opportunities for investment now at Seal Beach are better than ever before because it has grown by leaps and bounds during the last few months and has passed the stage where it is a question whether it is going to become a home city and resort or not. There is a magnificent large bath house and pavilion which will compare favorably with any other such structure on the Pacific coast: it contains hundreds of dressing rooms for the accommodation of bathers and also a large plunge which is the delight of both young and old. Another section of the gigantic building is given over for billiards and beautiful bowling alleys which are enjoyed by the ladies as well as the men. So says the South Coast Facts in directing attention to this advertisement.

    South Coast Facts was a 1914 promotional periodical published by Orange County booster, F. E. Scott, to promote forty miles of Orange County coastline locations, so citing it as an impartial authority on Seal Beach is a bit of a stretch.

    My favorite part of the ad is the column-wide hand pointing downward with the command to “Watch the Finger of Destiny.” The Finger of Destiny points to a photo taken on Ocean Avenue at First Street featuring the Owl’s Nest, the home of Bay City and Seal Beach founding father Philip Stanton at the far left. The Owl’s Nest is now gone, but the Lothian House shown in the background still stands at Second Street and Ocean Avenue.

    These two houses provided a visual hook for the ad’s copy:

    This street faces the Pacific ocean. Where is it?

    It is four miles east of Long Beach.
    It is 44 minutes from 6th and Main streets, Los Angeles.
    It is right in front of the place where the undertow is left out of the ocean.

    It is at Seal Beach, the Venice of the south coast.

    Certain to be the largest city in Orange county.
    There are more houses like this.
    There are miles of boulevards; miles of streets; miles of gas and water mains and electric light wires.
    There is a $100,000 twin pavilion and pier.
    There is a present and a future.
    Seal Beach is guaranteed by the growth of Los Angeles and the scarcity of Beach property.

    Take a Look Sunday. Come From Missouri.

    Get a part of the profits
    Lots $500 to $4000. 10 per cent down. Balance to suit you.

    And that was how they tried to sell real estate in Seal Beach back in 1914.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • September 13th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1941, Hitler and Mussolini were cooked and eaten by Seal Beach city employees.

    hitler

    ++++++++++++

     Not a hoax! Not an imaginary story! Now the truth can be told!

    I’m not kidding. This is for realsies. I’m as shocked as you.

    Okay, the Hitler and Mussolini eaten by city employees were not the dictators pictured above. They were, in fact, pigs. (Yeah, yeah, I know. So were the guys in the photos.) Here’s the truth behind the clickbait headline.

    Roy S. Nelson, the manager of a hog farm donated two hogs for the annual city employee picnic six weeks earlier when each hog weighed 50 pounds each. After six weeks of being fattened up with corn at the city yard, Hitler weighed in at 150 pounds while Mussolini hit the scale at 250 pounds. Hitler and Mussolini were handed over to Sam’s Sea Food Cafe and cooked for an expected crowd of 125, including city employees and their families. The picnic took place at night in the Seal Beach Sun Room at the base of the pier.

    – Michael Dobkins


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    This Date in Seal Beach History also has an online store hosted at Cafepress where you can order shirts, tote bags, stationery, and other gift items imprinted with vintage Seal Beach images. Visit the online store by clicking here.

  • September 12th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1936, the Los Angeles region experienced a series of power failures, plunging parts of the city into darkness.

    The first outage struck at 1:32 a.m. An emergency power plant near downtown Los Angeles restored power to some areas minutes later and then overloaded at 1:40 a.m. Power was finally restored completely to the region by 3:00 a.m., reviving streetlights, factory machinery, and radio stations. No estimate was given to how many Angelenos lost sleep due to electric burglary alarms being set off or how many employees showed up late to work because their electric alarm clocks were reset.

    1933-1940s-dwpThe culprit for the power outage was a generator inside a steam plant in Seal Beach. According to J. G. Barlow, chief engineer for the Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corporation, a load increase in the line serving the Southern Sierras Power Co. in Imperial Valley caused the generator to lose its magnetic field, and it ceased working. No explanation for the increase was given.

    – Michael Dobkins


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    This Date in Seal Beach History also has an online store hosted at Cafepress where you can order shirts, tote bags, stationery, and other gift items imprinted with vintage Seal Beach images. Visit the online store by clicking here.

  • September 11th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1960, the Los Angeles Times ran a short article on Phyllis Jay and the Seal Beach Marina Players.

    Bruce Jay looks on as his mother Phyllis Jay prepares for a performance
    Son Bruce looks on as his mother Phyllis Jay prepares for another performance

    In March 1959, Phyllis Jay produced and directed a 30-minute parody of South Pacific for a Huntington Beach High School PTA benefit. The performance was to be for one night only, but the response was too good to stop at one performance. As high school trustee Willard Hanzlik put it, “It’s so good it ought to hit the road.”

    Jay’s group of amateur players did just that, performing the piece 26 times locally at various benefits for PTAs, scout groups, veteran hospitals, senior citizens, and the mentally handicapped.

    Cooperation and adaptability was the key ingredients to the Seal Beach Marina Players success.

    Marge Tozer, one of the players designed and built the sets to fit into one station wagon with three different backgrounds to be used depending on the size of the stage. The players had to be flexible enough to perform with or without curtains, on small, medium, or large stages, and sometimes at floor level where the actors could literally “reach out and touch” the audience.

    A major highlight for Mrs. Jay was a Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce hosted “welcome neighbor” party night. The Seal Beach Marina Players gave three performances in one night in a 300-seat school auditorium (probably the J. H. McGaugh School Auditorium). 

    At the time of the article, the group had raised $3,000, approximately $24,000 in 2016 dollars.

    – Michael Dobkins


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    This Date in Seal Beach History also has an online store hosted at Cafepress where you can order shirts, tote bags, stationery, and other gift items imprinted with vintage Seal Beach images. Visit the online store by clicking here.

  • September 10th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1966, the Peppermint Playhouse held its last performance of Julius Caesar.

    sept_10_1966_peppermint_playhouse_julius_caesar_ad

    Today most people remember it as a child care center located at 225 Main Street, but the Peppermint Playhouse provided Seal Beach with local theatrics and dance instruction for years at various locations, including 124 Main Street where Endless Summer now operates, and the current management frowns upon the assassination of Roman emperors.

    – Michael Dobkins


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    This Date in Seal Beach History also has an online store hosted at Cafepress where you can order shirts, tote bags, stationery, and other gift items imprinted with vintage Seal Beach images. Visit the online store by clicking here.

     

  • September 9th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1938, this ad in the Santa Ana Register offer two choice places for dining, dancing and entertainment, Vivian Laird’s South Seas and Vivian Laird’s Garden of Allah in Seal Beach.  In spite of there being WOMEN CHEFS at South Seas, the people in the illustration for the Garden of Allah look like they’re having more fun.

    There were many owners of the Garden of Allah after Vivian Laird, and the lot has hosted a number of establishments including very briefly a church, a Jack in the Box for decades, and the recently closed Fresh & Easy. 

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • September 8th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1945, Phillip A. Stanton, founder of Seal Beach and Huntington Beach, died at the age of 77.

    stantondog– Michael Dobkins


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  • September 7th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1958, the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram ran a profile of Gene Harding, the manager of the Marina Shores tract in Seal Beach and the 1957 Long Beach Sales Executive Club’s Salesman of the Year under the headline “Blue-Eyed Blonde Bosses Seal Beach Sales Office.” The paper also ran a couple of photographs that reproduce poorly from microfilm.

    sept_7_1958_gene_harding_photoThe reporter of this piece, Sterling Bemis, knew a good hook when he saw it and played up the contrast of Gene Harding’s business acumen and success with her smashing good looks. Somewhere while describing her as “a spun-taffy blonde with blue eyes” and making note of her silky tan 35-24-35 figure, he mentions in passing that Gene’s “an alert, intense executive who is in the job up to 12 hours a day, often seven days a week.”

    Gene was short for Emogene, which Bemis described as a “curvy cognomen in tune with a 34-year old mother” with a 15 year-old son and a 5 year-old daughter. Gene was married to  a dietary specialist whose vitamin therapy was apparently responsible for her healthy physique, although she admitted that she kept “so busy that an extra pound wouldn’t dare tackle her.”  

    sept_7_1958_gene_harding_photo_2I like to think that last line shows that Gene had a sense of humor about the angle Bemis choose for the story, and that as a good “salesman” she realized that the publicity from the article would bring more people to the Marina Shores tract. Whether she realized it or not, she was using an oft-used tactic for promoting Seal Beach real estate with cheesecake. 

    Still, it had to feel at least a little disheartening for Gene to be a more than competent manager and salesperson and yet the bulk of her profile was spent focusing on her physical attributes.

    You can see an ad for Marina Shores in the post for March 30th in Seal Beach History

    – Michael Dobkins


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