Tag: Anaheim Bay

  • Somber Seal Beach

    Aerial Seal Beach – 1920s

    click on the image for a larger view

    This photo is listed as being from the twenties, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it was actually taken in the early thirties.  Except for a few cars driving through past on highway along the top of the photo, Seal Beach is empty of any signs of life. The pier, Main Street, the roller coaster and Joy Zone all seem deserted.  Maybe this was a chilly winter morning during the off-season, but this image seems to capture Seal Beach in a moment when it was well past its heyday as an amusement park attraction.

    Be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • Small Town From Above

    Aerial Seal Beach – 1938

    Here’s a nice long view of Seal Beach looking north in 1938.  You can see the homes and buildings of Anaheim Landing six years before the Naval Depot takes over the land and Anaheim Bay.  The Pacific Electric red car line runs through Anaheim Landing, up through Seal Beach on Electric Avenue, across Alamitos Bay to Appian Way where it runs parallel to the Long Beach Marine Stadium built for the 1932 Olympic rowing competition.  You can see the shorter stack power plant along the San Gabriel river.

    Bridgeport and The Hill  have yet to be developed.  The Long Beach Marina hasn’t been dredged.  McGaugh School isn’t even in the planning stages at this point.

    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.

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  • We Will Go To The Moon…

    Apollo Saturn V S-II Rocket on Bay Boulevard – 1960s

    We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too. – President John F. Kennedy, Rice University in Houston, Texas on September 12, 1962

    This past Sunday, it was the 48th anniversary of the famous Rice Stadium speech quoted above.  Early in that same month, a groundbreaking ceremony was held just off Bay Boulevard for the S-II Saturn assembly and test facilities to be built by the Navy for North American Aviation’s Space and Information Systems Division.  This provides commemorative significance to today’s inspiring photo, which comes to us courtesy of Nancey Kredell.

    click on the image for a larger view

    The next time you drive up Seal Beach Boulevard to the 405 freeway, dreading a long commute for a holiday family visit, a vacation road trip, or the rush hour stop and go conga to work, perhaps you can take some comfort in contemplating the really long commute each Saturn V S-2 rocket took going the opposite direction down Seal Beach Boulevard (still called Bay Boulevard back in the sixties).

    What you see in this photo are stage components for a Saturn V rocket being driven down Bay Boulevard (renamed Seal Beach Boulevard in the late sixties) to Anaheim Landing where they will be loaded on a transport (probably the U.S.N.S. Barrow Point).  From Anaheim Bay, they embarked on a sixteen day journey that took them through the Panama Canal to a  testing facility in Mississippi.  Ultimately, they would end up on a launch pad at Cape Kennedy in Florida and would propel an Apollo spacecraft into outer space.

    There’s a bit of a mystery about the above photograph.  The first stage in the foreground is a Saturn S-II rocket manufactured in the North American Aviation Assembly plant building in the background.  The second component is the interstage engine skirt that would protect the S-II’s engines during separation from the first stage rocket after take-off.  The third component is much harder to identify.  It could be a Saturn S-IVB stage rocket that had been manufactured at the Douglas Aircraft plant in Huntington Beach that was returned to Seal Beach for shipping to the Kennedy Space Center on June 13, 1966.  Or it might be a F-1 rocket engine that was shipped with a Saturn S-II on February 2, 1968.  Or it could be some other component and date I haven’t been able to discover in my search through NASA documentation.

    I’m hoping a more technically adept Apollo expert will provide more information (and/or corrections) to clear up this mystery in the comments.

    As an added bonus, here’s a color film footage taken from a Saturn S-II stage while in action.  This was filmed on November 9, 1967 during Apollo 4’s unmanned test flight mission.  First you’ll see the first stage (S-I) separate from S-II, and then the interstage engine skirt separates from the actual S-II.  Finally, from the other end of the S-II, you’ll see the S-IV separate from the S-II.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1vy4xXZynI&hl=en_US&fs=1]

    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. 

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  • Look Down on Seal Beach

    Aerial Seal Beach – 12/05/1921

    click on the image for a larger view

    It’s less than three weeks from Christmas in 1921, and here’s a Santa Claus and reindeer view of what Seal Beach looked like 89 years ago.

    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.

  • On The Other Side Of The Tracks

    Images of The Week

    Anaheim Bay – 1914

    These four photographs provide an almost 180 degree glimpse of Anaheim Landing take from the Pacific Electric tracks ninety-six years ago.

    This shot faces north towards where J. H. McGaugh Intermediate School will be built in about forty years.  The dock just left from the center was a familiar Anaheim Landing landmark for years.

    The photographer turned a bit to his right to give us a nice shot of some homes along the shore of Anaheim Bay.  These homes would either be destroyed or moved into Seal Beach when the Navy took over the bay in 1944.  Note the man in suspenders taking a break in the sand.

    A little more to the right to show some more homes and the marshy area that will someday become the Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge.

    And finally a view towards what would become the Surfside Colony and Sunset Beach.

    We’ll share more historical pictures and photos of Seal Beach as the year progresses.   Be sure to check back every Monday for a new Seal Beach image.

    Bookmark and Share– 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. 

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  • Where The Buoys Are

    Image of The Week

    Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station – 1955

    Bonus ImageBonus Image

    These stacked buoys (without the guards) were once a familiar sight to motorists traveling on Pacific Coast Highway between Anaheim Landing and the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station.

    See the buoys?

    Eleven years later buoys are still being stacked in the same spot as shown in this aerial photograph taken on October 14th, 1966.

    We’ll share more historical pictures and photos of Seal Beach as the year progresses.   Be sure to check back every Monday for a new Seal Beach image.

    – 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.