Tag: Orange County history

  • THIS DATE IN SEAL BEACH HISTORY RETURNS

    I guess I’m really going to do this. Consider this a soft announcement with a more “official” and splashy announcement coming at the end of October.

    Starting today, I’ve embarked on a project of writing and scheduling a brand new year’s worth of posts of the This Date in Seal Beach History blog to launch on January 1st, 2026. The plan is to publish a fresh daily Seal Beach historical post for each date in the 2026 calendar, barring health issues, disasters, credible criminal threats, torrid, distracting affairs with showgirls, and, of course, real paying writing work.

    The daily posts on the blog will be free and available to the public.

    However, all this historical research requires subscriptions to online archives and editing software, and all of that costs. It costs a lot for what is essentially just a hobby that involves a lot of time and work, not a professional business. With that in mind, I’m renewing my usual pitch for donations:

    A New Video

    I’m currently working on a Seal Beach video that will be posted publicly to commemorate the 110th anniversary of Seal Beach’s incorporation on October 27, 1915.

    The video takes one vintage Seal Beach photograph as a launching point for an imaginary time travel tour to the day the photograph was taken to visit various landmarks in the photo. There will be plenty of photographs and some Seal Beach History information I don’t think has been shared before. I’m not going to share any more details, but I think it will be lots of fun for people who love the Joy Zone era of Seal Beach History.

    I haven’t scheduled the actual date yet (probably during the week of September 8-14), but I’ll be hosting a private live online sneak peak preview of this video exclusively for donors.

    A recording of the sneak preview will be available to view for the rest of September with a private password provided to any donor who misses the preview (or wants to see it again.)

    Other Plans and Possibilities

    I’m considering other ways to fund this project for the next year or so, including starting a Patreon page with exclusive content for monthly subscribers, “brand” merchandising, marrying into money, or reluctantly accepting advertising on individual dated posts or weekly runs of posts. I’m open to any ideas or suggestions you make in the comments or via e-mail. I’ll share more details when everything is all worked out in September.

    I will also be migrating this blog to it’s own dedicated web site and adding a This Date in Seal Beach History YouTube site later in 202

    And remember, donations can be made here.

  • Have a Merry Seal Beach Christmas

    Merry Christmas to all Seal Beach residents and visitors both past and present, across the planet and on the ships at sea!

    There is plenty of work and preparation going on for the site’s relaunch in 2024, but sharing the details will have to wait. We’ve charged up the flux capacitor and are about to pop into the DeLorean for a turkey dinner with walnuts, dressing, cranberry sauce and musical accompaniment by Jimmie Means on the Hammond organ at Sam’s Seafood in 1963.

    It’s a little pricey, but the parking is free.

    – Michael Dobkins

  • October 19th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1949, Seal Beach residents woke to discover that during the night frigid fifty miles per hour winds and rough waves had torn the Super Express fishing boat from its moorings at Seal Beach pier and smashed the boat upon the Seal Beach Naval Ammunition Depot breakwater, leaving a gaping hole in the hull.

    As dramatic as this event was to the normally sedate Seal Beach, it was just one of many similar incidents spread across Southern California. Flights at LAX airport had been grounded. Boats had been beached at Santa Monica and Redondo Beach. The Monstad Pier in Redondo Beach had a section torn apart by waves. Several inches of sand had blown on to Pacific Coast Highway, stranding automobiles and buses. Trees were toppled, and some communities went without electricity for a few hours. Daylight brought calmer weather, and repairs and clean-up efforts began.

    In Seal Beach, the Super Express was beached, and the hole was repaired with a temporary canvas patch to make the vessel seaworthy enough to be towed to the San Pedro Boat Works. The canvas patch prove too temporary for the entire trip and peeled, and the boat sank in what must have been shallow water. It was re-floated, re-patched, and towed to safely to San Pedro for more substantial repairs.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • October 18th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1957, the Long Beach Independent published the following black and white illustration of the proposed Bank Of Belmont Shore branch to be built in Seal Beach in early 1958.

    The footprint of the property the bank would have stood on would have encompassed the lots where Brita’s Old Town Gardens (225 Main Street), The Flipside Beach Boutique (231 Main Street) and the First Team Real Estate (245 Main Street) now do business. It might have also included the land where Nick’s Deli now serves breakfast burritos, but it’s difficult to tell just from the illustration.

    Seal Beach history is filled with ambitious proposals that never became a reality, and this is one of stranger ones.

    The bank building was scheduled to be opened on the southwest corner of Electric Avenue and Main Street on the inauspicious date of April 1st. Charles L. Green, the member of the bank’s board of directors in charge of planning the new branch told a Los Angeles Times reporter on June 29th that architects’ plans were to be completed in two months. And what plans they were!

    The architectural style eschewed the traditional bank design of classical marble columns in favor of a more modern and open look with plate glass walls on two sides and a nautical theme for the interior decor. This was not an unusual aesthetic for the mid-fifties. What took the design on a Mr. Toad’s wild ride into wonkiness was revealed in seven words that were part of the caption for the illustration: Live seals will swim in a pool.

    I assume that the smaller structure that runs from inside the bank building out into the landscape in front of the bank is the pool for the seals. It’s hard to tell from the grainy illustration taken from a newspaper page that was poorly scanned for microfilm archives, but there does seem to be at least two seals featured in the architect’s rendering.

    LIVE SEALS WILL SWIM IN A POOL

    Now, please. I ask you to pause and take a long moment to imagine the entirety implied in the concept of “Live seals will swim in a pool.” Close your eyes if it helps you imagine — but only for a moment. You’re going to have to reopen them to read the next paragraph.

    First, think about what it would be like to do your financial business in a building with a pool of seals. Could you go over the details of a home mortgage, a business loan, or a deposit error with a bank officer or teller while playful aquatic mammals splash around and grunt a few yards away? If you were a teller or vault manager, could you concentrate enough to balance out your drawers at the end of the day after listening to that cacophony for eight hours? Who feeds the seals? Where’s the closest veterinarian who can treat sick seals? What does it smell like in the bank? What do you do about all the kids and oddballs who show up just to watch the seals and get in the way of your actual customers? On a practical level, the seals would be cute for about a day, and then they would become a banking nightmare.

    I found this news item only a few hours ago, and these questions immediately occurred to me. Who came up with this idea, and why didn’t he reject it for instantly apparent practical reasons?

    Did Charles L. Green visit Marineland (which opened in 1954), see a crowd of tourists around the seal tank, and say to himself, “Boy, if only we could get a crowd this size into our bank. We’d make a fortune! Wait a minute, we want to open up a Seal Beach branch! This is genius! I can’t wait to tell the guys!”

    This was during the economic and real estate boom brought by the construction of the Long Beach Marina, so maybe this aquatic scheme seemed… on brand?

    Whatever sparked the inspiration for this idea and whoever pitched it, Not single member of the Bank of Belmont Shore’s board of directors objected to this lunacy. What I would give to be a fly on the wall when these solid community leaders and supposedly sensible businessmen decided to pass the idea on to an architectural firm.

    I don’t blame the architects. If the check clears, crazy people’s money spends just as well as sane folks’s cash.

    If I’m flippantly casting aspersions of the sanity of someone’s kindly grandfather or beloved relative nearly two-thirds of a century later, please forgive me. Whatever their finer qualities and life achievements might have been, you have to admit that approving a tank of live seals in a bank was crazier than a soup sandwich.

    Or maybe it was all merely an elaborate April Fool’s Day prank The Bank of Belmont Shore was playing on the City of Seal Beach. It was due to be opened on April 1st, after all. Who knows?

    Please forgive this self-indulgent digression. Sometimes the ideal of objective history telling must set aside for a good “What were they — nuts?” rant.

    ——————-

    Luckily for whatever unsuspecting seals might have ended up in such unpleasant captivity, the branch was never built, but the reason remains elusive. According to city council minutes, the City of Seal Beach did business with the Bank of Belmont Shore between 1955 and 1958, but there is no mention of a potential bank branch in the city. The likely reason for plans for the proposed branch being abandoned had less to do with impractical building designs and more to do with internal issues within The Bank of Belmont Shore that become public in December 1957.

    The Bank of Belmont Shore always had a troubled history. The original Belmont Shore branch building still exists at 5354 East Second Street and is a familiar landmark to anyone who visits Belmont Shore regularly. The building was built in 1929 and spent the good part of two decades as a location for a variety of short-lived restaurants. In 1950, Pasadena investors bought the building and commissioned Francis Gentry to design and remodel a state-of-the-art banking facility tucked stylishly inside a distinctive Spanish Colonial Revival exterior with drive-thru teller windows. That remodel was completed in 1951.

    Then the $200,000 building remained unoccupied for more than a year and a half. The venture was originally to be funded by a half a million dollar stock offering to local investors, but only $35,000 was raised. Soon, the Pasadena investors were beset by liens against the building by Gentry, the Herman Safe Co., and speedboat race champion Richard Loynes, owner of the land leased to the investors. When the bank finally did open on December 14, 1953, none of those original Pasadena investors was listed among the names of new bank’s leaders and officers.

    For the next few years, news articles about the bank were favorable, mostly highlighting community involvement or meetings held in the bank’s popular community room. The bank was even a sponsor of The Miss Universe contest and often hosted appearances of individual contestants.

    This image of civic virtue came crashing down when it was revealed that the bank’s president and vice-president had embezzled from the bank numerous times to a staggering total of $305,000, starting a mere month after the bank’s grand opening. The two bank officers were forced to resign to face an indictment with seventy counts of embezzlement, conspiracy, misapplications of funds, and making false entries. They were also forced to sell their shares in the bank, giving more honest investors control of the bank.

    By all accounts, the new management ran The Bank of Belmont Shore honestly and well, and the institution’s prosperity grew year-by-year. Unfortunately, at the same time the two resigned officers were in and out of court for their crimes from 1958 to 1960, constantly tainting The Bank of Belmont Shore’s reputation with news stories of fraud, embezzlement, and dishonesty. In May 1960, The Bank of Belmont Shore was renamed Coast Bank the day before the former bank president was sentenced.

    That’s not really Seal Beach history, but it does explain why none of us will ever ask on social media if anyone else remembers the bank on Main and Electric that had a tank of seals.

    – 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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  • August 24th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1958, the Long Beach Independent reported the award winners of the second annual Children’s Daze Art Show sponsored by the Seal Beach Artists’ League as part of a summer weekend series of outdoor art exhibits just east of the Seal Beach pier. The show displayed an assortment of fifty paintings and sculptures. The judges were from the Long Beach Museum of Art.

    The top ribbon was awarded to six year-old Kathy King of 114 12th Street by unanimous vote. Other winners were:

    SEVEN TO NINE YEARS OF AGE
    First place: Sonia Ericson, 8, of La Habra
    Second place: Claudia Nissley, 8, of 1211 Electric Avenue

    TEN TO ELEVEN YEARS OF AGE
    First place: Rusty Burris, 10, of 108 25th Sunset Beach
    Second place: Connie King, 10, of 114 12th Street
    Third place: Meta Nissley, 10, 0f 1211 Electric Avenue

    TWELVE YEARS OF AGE
    First place: Jolyan Pratt of 277 Bay Shore Avenue
    Second place: Adriene Werth of 16822 Pacific Coast Highway

    THIRTEEN TO SIXTEEN YEARS OF AGE
    First place: Dawn Ericson, 14, of La Habra
    Second place: David Brown, 13, of 224 4th Street

    Honorable mention in the sculpture category went to Meta and Claudia Nissley

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • July 16th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1938, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt passed into Seal Beach at 11:40 a.m. on his way to San Diego for a west coast fishing vacation.

    The Presidential motorcade stopped briefly in Seal Beach as a Los Angeles County patrol car guard passed escort duties to Orange County police officials for a forty mile trip through the county on a coast highway lined with throngs of cheering crowds and patriotic decorations. Accompanying President Roosevelt on the motor trip was Senator McAdoo and his wife.

    – 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.

  • July 13th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1951, the Covina Argus ran this Pacific Electric advertisement prominently featuring a bus, not a red car trolley, as a speedy ride to Seal Beach and other beachside destinations.

    Today we remember Pacific Electric through a romantic haze of nostalgia as an intricate rail system of street cars, but as the Pacific Electric approached mid-century, the company tried to change with the times by shifting as much as it could to non-rail motor buses.

    July_13_1951_PE_ad

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • July 7th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1968, the Long Beach Independent ran the following ad for College Park homes. For only $27,950, you could have this kid and all his relatives as neighbors.

    One way to tell the history of Seal Beach is through all the advertising used to sell Seal Beach real estate. The date-by-date approach of the blog has allowed me to share a variety of ads and promotional efforts to sell lots from various decades, and each ad not only indicates what the salespeople and marketers from the era thought was important about the city, but it also shows the values of the wider culture at the time. The success of these real estate pitches vary in quality and creativity. That’s part of the fun of sharing them.

    I’ve run some very odd vintage real estate ads, but this one is just weird. Here’s the copy from this ad. Read it for yourself and see if you agree:

    Who hasn’t purchased an S & S home yet?

    I haven’t

    But my grandparents have, my mother and father have, my aunts and uncles have, my older brother has, and when my savings account grows, I will too!

    Guess it’s because S & S builds such great houses.

    Mommy just loves imported marble entries, custom cut-crystal chandeliers, and the huge all-electric kitchen. Daddy says the construction is “tops” because S & S uses double thick lath and plaster (not drywall), marble tabletops, genuine stone or brick fireplaces.

    I love the plush wall to wall carpeting and it’s in all the rooms.

    Shapell Park, one of the newest parks in Seal Beach, is within the community and my school, the beach and mommy’s shopping are just minutes away.

    Uncle Joe says one of the best things about College Park is the price, $27,950… and he should know, ’cause he’s the President of a big bank.

    You really oughta see this place. It’s super. But you better hurry before all my other relatives arrive.

    Does that make you want to buy a College Park home? Who do you think is the target market for this ad? And what does this ad say about the 1968 Southern California culture?

    – 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.

  • June 19th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1964, the following ad for Surf Boards By Jack Haley ran in the Los Angeles Times.

    This is just one date in time from one man’s notable life. Jack Haley was and remains a Seal Beach institution. In his sixty-five years of life, He was so many things: family man, surfing pioneer, lifeguard, entrepreneur, mentor, and restaurateur. People who knew Jack Haley called him, “Mister Excitement.”

    Mister Excitement first came to prominence on September 22, 1959 when he became the first West Coast Surfing Champion. This was in the early long board days of the surfing culture before it blossomed into a multi-millionaire industry. The enthusiasm and personalities of young surfers like Haley, Blackie August, Rich Harbour, and so many others influenced the shape of that culture, and that influence is still felt today.

    But surfers need day jobs, and Jack Haley kept close to the waves and beach by becoming a Seal Beach lifeguard in the early sixties. If you’ve ever spoken to Seal Beach lifeguards, you know they have countless stories about their experiences. Two incidents from Jack Haley’s lifeguard days were noteworthy enough into the Long Beach Independent Press Telegram.

    The first is a typical lifeguard rescue story. Four surfers had been swept half a mile out to sea on a Sunday afternoon in February 1963. The teenagers lost their surfboards in the breaking waves at the mouth of the San Gabriel River where the ocean tides mixed with river’s current. Three of the surfers, teenaged friends from Whittier, were saved by boat, and it was uncertain when the story was written whether or not the fourth, not part of the Whittier group had made it to shore independently.

    “The surf out there was terrible,” said Lt. Lifeguard Haley. “When they lost their boards they couldn’t swim against the river’s current. They were rescued near the oil drilling island, which is a half-mile from shore.”

    According to Haley, it was the first time in ten years the waves were breaking beyond the end of the the quarter mile long Seal Beach pier — the sort of detail a seasoned surfer would note. In the newspaper story, Haley seems to be the source for the information about the rescue, but care was taken to also give credit to Seal Beach lifeguards Fred Miller and Tim Dorsey for other less striking and yet important swimmer and surfer rescues under rough conditions.

    At nightfall, the fourth surfer had still not been located, and the Coast Guard planned to resume searching the next day. There is no follow up story, so one hopes the surfer made it to shore, safe but unnoticed.

    The second story is little more unusual and takes places two months later in April 1963. Under the lovely headline of “Surfboard Terror Arrested At Sea,” the Long Beach Independent Press-Telegram of surfer Terry Lee Gardner of Garden Grove. Gardner had attached razor blades to the skag (rudder) of his surfboard and threatened to “cut to ribbons anyone who got in his way.”

    At the time, there were 150 surfers in the newly designated surfing area. Gardner tried to run his fellow surfer down until the Seal Beach police arrived and ordered him to shore. Instead of complying, Gardener paddled out to sea.

    Haley set out after Gardner in a rowboat, and the Long Beach Harbor Patrol boats were called out. When Haley and the patrol boats caught up with Gardner, he was frantically trying to remove the razor blades from his board. He was charged with assault with a deadly weapon.

    Not every workday in a lifeguard’s life are as dramatic as these, but rescuing, life-saving, maintaining a safe beach and waters, and aiding beachgoers and swimmers are regular events, whether newspapers take note or not. A single lifeguard can have an immeasurable, but significant impact on thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands of lives during his or her career.

    One would think being the first West Coast Surfing Champion and a Seal Beach lifeguard would be enough for one lifetime, but Jack Haley had an entrepreneurial spirit. Riding the wave of his success as a surfing champion, he opened his own surfboard shop in Seal Beach in 1961.

    In 1963, two months after helping nab the Surfboard Terror of Garden Grove, Haley and his brother Mike opened a surfing school.

    Next on Jack Haley’s list of accomplishments came in 1965 when he opened Captain Jack’s in Sunset Beach. The first few years of business were a struggle for Haley and his family, but over half a century later, you can still get a table at Captain Jack’s, and enjoy a cocktail and a nice steak or seafood meal with a complimentary basket of bread. Other long-lasting local restaurants like Sam’s Seafood, the Ranch House, and the Glide ‘er Inn have slipped into history, fondly remembered and gone, but Captain Jack’s is still flourishing and is still run by the Haley family.

    In 1997, Haley spearheaded a successful campaign to privately fund construction of a lifeguard station at the base of the Seal Beach pier, and the station was named for him. In July 1999, Haley was inducted into the Surfer Hall of Fame.

    For all the drive for success and excellence and variety of activities that Jack Haley poured into life, he did not neglect his family: his wife, Jeanette; his mother, Virginia, another notable Seal Beach citizen; and children, Tim, currently manager of Captain Jack’s, Sondra, and Jack Jr., who played two seasons for the Lakers and passed away in 2015.

    In a 2015 Los Angeles Times profile celebration of Captain Jack’s 50th anniversary, Tim Haley recalled various family outings like cruises to Catalina on the yacht, Christina, ski trips to Mammoth, and motorcycle rides to Enseneda. The family would have dinner together every night.

    On March 26, 2000, Jack Haley passed away at age sixty-five to cancer. True to form, Mister Excitement had planned his own beach party memorial with Hawaiian shirts and mariachi music. “He demanded there not be a tear at the party. He wanted it to celebrate his life,” said Tim Haley in the Los Angeles Times obituary. Later, Tim added, Jack Haley’s ashes would be spread in the sea at Maui and Cabo San Lucas, “so he will continue surfing.”

    You can visit Captain Jack’s web site here, or call after 3 p.m. 562-592-2514 for reservations.

    – Michael Dobkins

    P.S. Because it’s come up more than a few times over the years, Seal Beach’s Jack Haley was not related to Jack Haley, the song and dance man best known for his role as the Tin Man in the 1939 MGM musical, The Wizard of Oz. Or Bill Haley of “Rock Around The Clock” fame. Let’s stop spreading these myths, folks!


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