Tag: 1920

  • August 24th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1920, Seal Beach fans of fresh milk were presented with an opportunity to enjoy the freshest of milk.  A “Fresh Jersey Cow” who was a “fine milker” and”very gentle” was listed for sale in the Santa Ana Register’s classified ads by F. L. Bailey at 259 5th Street.Aug_24_1920_Cow_for_Sale

    Ninety-nine years later, F. L. Bailey and the cow are gone and the address has been changed to 412 Marina Drive, but there is still milk (and other beverages) available at Marina Liquor, one of the businesses at this location.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • August 21st in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1918, Barney Weaver spent the last night of his life in Seal Beach. 

    Details vary slightly from newspaper article to article. According to the Santa Ana Register, Los Angeles policeman Barney Weaver and an attractive young woman purported to be his wife choose Seal Beach as the site of a suicide pact. Barney Weaver had been drafted and was to leave on August 22nd, and the two had decided to die together rather than be separated. Weaver placed his revolver against her head a number of times, but couldn’t force himself to pull the trigger. Finally, he put the revolver to his own head and fired, killing himself instantly. The woman’s name was not mentioned in the story

    The Los Angeles Times story two days later added many details to the tale, but the article only deepened the mystery. According to Weaver’s relatives, he had received threatening letters from a woman and that the same woman had contacted the local draft board with information that resulted in his deferment due to dependents having been revoked.

    The woman on the beach with Weaver that night was now identified as twenty-one year old Theresa Marie Forgeron, and the Times makes a strong implication that she was one writing the letters and contacting the draft board. She had lived with Weaver for three months, although she was alleged to be married to another man. The two had separated recently after an argument, and Forgeron told the police that Weaver had been jealous of her and had even struck her once.

    Aug_21_1918_SB_Suicide_Pact___Theresa_Marie_Forgeron

    The police investigation discovered that Weaver had been ordered to appear before the draft board and that Forgeron had appeared before the board. The board ordered that Weaver should marry Forgeron that day and return on the 22nd for a physical examination, after which he would most likely be shipped to Camp Lewis. The two left the board hearing in tears.

    Their quarrel forgotten, Weaver and Forgeron hired an auto and drove to Seal Beach. A letter signed by Forgeron on the suicide scene stated that she  was pregnant and could not live on the $30 that the army would pay Weaver. Reading between the lines, it seems likely that Mrs. Theresa Marie Forgeron would not have been eligible for any spousal benefits because she was already married to another man and had been “living in sin” with Barney Weaver those three months. This was not spelled out directly in the Times article, but the truth was that the two lovers could not marry as ordered by the draft board.

    It’s possible that when the police questioned Forgeron that they received a fuller accounting of Weaver’s and her night in Seal Beach, but the Times says nothing in the story. Perhaps they had a last meal at Jewel Cafe or went dancing. Another mystery is why they choose Seal Beach. Did they have shared history there? Was it a romantic getaway that they had planned in happier times and this was their last chance to take it? There is so much of this story that exists only in the realm of speculation.

    What is certain is that around 2 a.m. that night, Barney Weaver took his life on the sands of Seal Beach. Mabel Thomas, who had been near the scene, testified before Orange County Coroner Winbigler at the  that she had heard a woman begging “Take me with you!” right before the shot. Four letters found in Weaver’s pocket described their suicide pact and Mrs. Theresa Marie Forgeron’s testimony lead the Coroner’s jury to rule Weaver’s death a suicide.

    One of the letters ended: “I am going to take Dot with me. Please bury us together, even if you have to bury us in the potter’s field.”

    There’s no one alive today who remembers Barney Weaver, and very few details about him survive. At the time of his death, he was nearing the end of his six month probationary period with the Los Angeles Police, but according to city directories and his draft registration card, his previous employment was as a conductor for Pacific Electric. It’s possible that he may have even worked on the red car trolleys traveling through Seal Beach. He was born on January 22nd, 1889 in Mansfield, Missouri. His draft card listed him as being of medium height and build with blue eyes and light hair. He had already served one and a half years of military service as a corporal for the Second Field Artillery. And in August 1919, facing an uncertain future as the father of a child with a woman still married to another man, Barney M. Weaver ended his life.

    After the inquest on the 22nd, Undertaker Montell took Forgeron to her grandmother’s home in Los Angeles. Later, she left and wandered the streets until nighttime and then went to her mother’s house where the police found her and brought her in for questioning (which seems odd since the death had already been ruled a suicide.)

    There is addendum to this sad affair that concerns Theresa Marie’s unnamed husband. In 1920, both the Los Angeles Times and the Santa Ana Register ran articles on a Willard W. Forgeron filing for divorce from his wife, Theresa Marie Forgeron. Willard had been a soldier in World War I when the suicide occurred and had only heard about it upon his return. He filed for divorce in 1919, but in August 1920 he was finally able to provide proof that his wife was the woman involved in the suicide pact by producing clippings of the Los Angeles Times story with the picture of his wife and providing testimony from Barney Weaver’s and Theresa Marie’s Forgeron’s landlady. Willard Forgeron got his divorce, later remarried, and died in 1964.

    As for Theresa Marie Forgeron, she disappeared after August 22nd. She isn’t listed in the 1920, the 1930, or the 1940 census under the Forgeron last name or her mother’s last name. In fact, her mother and her grandmother don’t show up in any city directory or census. Using the addresses given in the Los Angeles Times story about the suicide and Google street views, I was able to explore her 1919 neighborhood on the web. Her grandmother’s apartment, her mother’s house, and the apartment she shared with Barney Weaver were only a few blocks away from each other, although the 10 Freeway passes over where her love nest with Barney once stood. It’s hard not to imagine young Theresa Marie wandering those streets, wondering how it all went wrong and blaming herself for the tragedy and scared about her impending motherhood. I hope it didn’t end for her there. I hope that she went somewhere else, somewhere far away and rebuilt her life under a new name and found peace and happiness.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • July 11th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1920, a Hindu, Salen Shonka, was arrested on a vagrancy charge because he walked about the streets of Seal Beach “at late and unusual hours without apparent reason,” according to the Santa Ana Register.

    Mr. Shonka, who operated a fortune-telling booth in Seal Beach for several years and claimed to own property in town, pleaded not guilty the next day and demanded a jury trial via his lawyer, G. M. Spicer. Mr. Shonka was released under $50 bail and assigned a trial date of July 21.

    Unfortunately, no follow-up story was printed, so Mr. Shonka’s fate remains a mystery.

    – Michael Dobkins


    Have you enjoyed this and other This Date in Seal Beach History posts?

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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.

  • April 24th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1920, the Santa Ana Register invited people who liked it snappy to the grand opening of the Famous ‘Frisco Five at the Jewel Cafe!

    – Michael Dobkins


    Have you enjoyed this and other This Date in Seal Beach History posts?

    If so, please consider making a small donation of a dollar or more to help defray the online subscriptions and other research costs that make this blog possible.

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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.

  • April 7th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1922, the Baldwin Piano Company filed a suit against the Seal Beach Inn and Cafe and its proprietor, F. C. Blankenship. According to the suit, the inn had purchased a grand piano on contract for $85o on March 29, 1918, but the contract had not been fulfilled. The Baldwin Piano Company’s suit was for recovery of the piano or $850 and $150 for damages and court costs. The Baldwin Piano Company had filed a similar suit in 1920 when the lease on the piano had run out without being paid, but it apparently had not resolved the issue.

    – Michael Dobkins


    Have you enjoyed this and other This Date in Seal Beach History posts?

    If so, please consider making a small donation of a dollar or more to help defray the online subscriptions and other research costs that make this blog possible.

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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.

  • April 6th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1920, the Seal Beach Chamber of Commerce held the fourth annual Snowball Dance.

    April_6_1920_Snowball_Dance
    According to a February 2 story in the Santa Ana Register, “an entirely new decorative scheme is being perfected which will make the massive dance pavilion resemble a mass of snowballs” and a new stage setting would make “the decorations the most elaborate ever seen in Seal Beach.”

    Music was provided by the six-piece Silver Spray Orchestra, a popular local group that even had its own late night show broadcasted from Long Beach’s KFOX radio station in 1929 and 1930.

    The 1919 Snowball Dance had 1500 dancers, but the chamber prepared for at least 2000 dancer for the 1920 event. Hypothetically, 51,500 dancers should be anticipated for this year’s Snowball Dance, but Seal Beach’s last Snowball Dance was held in 1921.

    – Michael Dobkins


    Have you enjoyed this and other This Date in Seal Beach History posts?

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  • Faces in the Crowd

    Fridays on The Pier – 1920

    The Seal Beach pier has been a favorite subject for photographers throughout its 95 years of history.  Every Friday between now and the end of the Seal Beach Founders Celebration, we’ll be posting an image of the pier.

    Here’s a beach level view you don’t see too often of the Jewel City Cafe from the east side on the pier in the early afternoon, judging by the shadows.  Something just off-camera seems to be catching the attention of most of the crowd in the lower left corner, but we’ll never know what it was.

    There’s a couple interesting details to note in this photograph.  First is that there’s a sign inside the entry structure to the pier with an illustrated hand pointing to the “BALL ROOM.”

    Some sort of a concession has been set up under the stairs for “EXPRESS MOVING.” I’ve tried to make out the rest of the words on the sign, but I just can’t.  Whatever it was, it was busy enough to justify having two guys working the counter.

    But for me, the most intriguing aspect of this image is the people.  When we blow up the photos to get a closer look at the individuals, you can discern little touches of personality in each person — even when the image is a little blurry.  Like this couple sitting on a bench up on the pier.  Is he saluting the photographer or pulling his hat down to avoid being recognized?  She seems calm and unflappable.  Also, that’s one great mustache.

    Next to the couple is a young woman and child.  If you walk down the pier today, you’ll see at least one kid like this leaning over the rail that’s too tall for them.

    Bored with each other?  Bored with the beach?  Who knows?  One thing is obvious.  They are not having a good time.

    On the ground below the pier, the crowd faces away from us, but I like this gentleman’s cap and those big hands behind his back.  And look at the detail on her dress and collar.

    This fellow is eying the photographer with a hard to read expression.  Note the watch chain hooked to his lapel.  None of those sissy wristwatches for this guy.

    Behind him is this spitfire with her hands on her hips.  I get the impression you would not want to get into an argument with her.  What is she thinking?  Women finally got the vote in 1920, and I’d like to believe that she was the type of woman who once she got to vote never missed an election for the rest of her life. 

    Maybe I’m projecting.

    And finally, this little girl peers out from an oblivious crowd directly at the photographer and at us from ninety years ago.  All this from one snapshot moment in 1920.

    That’s all for this week.  Have a great weekend, and be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach.
     
    – Michael Dobkins


    Have you enjoyed this and other This Date in Seal Beach History posts?

    If so, please consider making a small donation of a dollar or more to help defray the online subscriptions and other research costs that make this blog possible.

    Donations can be made securely with most major credit cards directly through PayPal. Just click on paypal.me/MichaelDobkins to go to PayPal. Thank you.

    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.

     
     

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