Tag: Leisure World

  • October 13th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1980, presidential candidate Ronald Reagan made a speech at a closed-to-the-public campaign stop at Seal Beach Leisure World.

    Ronald Reagan greets enthusiastic supporters at Leisure World

    Speaking to a crowd of approximately 2,500, Reagan affirmed his support of the Social Security program, promised to tighten Medicare so the elderly could get more benefits from it, and received great applause when he criticized earnings limitations on people drawing Social Security.

    This was not Reagan’s first visit to Leisure World. He gave a speech there in 1966 while campaigning for governor.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • August 11th in Seal Beach History

     On this date in 1963, the following ad ran in the Long Beach Independent for Rossmoor Leisure World.

    August_11_1963_Leisure_World_Full_Page_Ad

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • June 28th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1966, Red Devil Fireworks ran this black and white ad in the Long Beach Independent.

    That year the Scholarship League and Cub Scout pack 105 ran the local Seal Beach fireworks stands at Pacific Coast Highway at the Long Beach border and one at the vacant lot between Marina Drive and Central Avenue at Second Street. The Leisure World Lions  ran one at Westminster and Bay Boulevard (now Seal Beach Boulevard). The McGaugh Band ran a Black Panther stand at Bolsa Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway. There were probably also Freedom and Wildcat fireworks stands set up in town, but I can’t find any location listings.

    Seal Beach kids of a certain age will remember when fireworks were still legal in town and how the local charitable institutions would run firework stands in parking lots and roadside locations for a few weeks before Independence Day. 

    The anticipation would begin when the empty firework stands mysteriously appeared around mid-June (just days after school let out!), the fireproof metal doors left ajar as if to say, “No fireworks here, kid. Life is filled with disappointments. Get used to it.”

    Suddenly the stands would be padlocked which meant that the firework inventory had been delivered, probably after midnight by sharply uniformed men who trained all year for this one special holiday. Normally honest kids circled the stands and checked the locks, greedy for just a glimpse at the gaudily packaged fireworks displayed within.

    Advertising flyers promising pure pyrotechnic joy would be inserted in the Sunday newspaper. Kids all across town would study the different illustrations of fireworks and fireworks assortment packages while parents nervously focused on the prices.

    The last part of this essential patriotic ritual would involve the kids incessantly nagging their parents (What if they run out of all the good fireworks? Mooom! Daaaaad! We gotta go todaaaay!). Finally mom and dad relented, and the family drove to whichever stand they favored and bought that year’s firework supplies.

    Kids were always disgusted by the dismal lack of ambition in purchasing enough fireworks (Never enough! Never enough!), but on July Fourth, up and down the sidewalks, curbs, and asphalt streets of Seal Beach, residents somehow managed to set off fireworks for hours after the sun set. It was glorious.

    I don’t begrudge the safer and saner regulations that make the local fire department’s job a little easier, but, boy, do I miss that ritual.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • June 8th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1962, the first residents of Leisure World moved in. According to a story in the next day’s Long Beach Independent, the first moving trucks began arriving at 9 a.m.

    Among the first forty-eight families waiting for their keys were 75 year-old John E. Burr, I trucking business retiree, and his 72 year-old wife, Lena. The two were downsizing from a 3,000 square foot Corona home to a one-bedroom apartment because, Burr joked, there was “too much yard work.”

    Their 55 year-old son, Frank sold his house and party shop in Covina to take a unit 100 feet away from his parents. He was attracted to the medical benefits and recreational activities offered by Leisure World.

    Robert and Ethel Earl, both 70, downsized from their Santa Monica home to a trailer the previous year, but decided Leisure World was “a perfect setup for us.”

    A spokesman said that another 48 apartments would be occupied by June 14th and that all 844 units of the first development would be full by August 1st.

    The following full page ad was run in Southland Newspapers throughout June of 1962.

    – 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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