Tag: power plant

  • Take a Look at Historical Seal Beach – Late 1958

    If you belong to a generation who lived during the era when black and white series still aired on broadcast television, chances are you fondly remember the television show named “Sea Hunt.” This was an immensely popular syndicated half hour action and adventure show that enjoyed a top-rated four season first run from 1958 to 1961 and then went to reruns for decades.

    The series starred Lloyd Bridges as hyper-competent ex-Navy frogman and freelance scuba diver, Mike Nelson. Each week (or every afternoon once the show went into reruns), Nelson’s steadiness and ultra-reliability made him the go-to guy for the military, law enforcement, charter fishermen, or anyone who needed assistance with a marine crisis or seabound adventure. For 155 episodes, Mike Nelson tangled with bank robbers and crooks, consulted on top-secret military missions, recovered underwater treasure, fought dangerous sea critters, rescued distressed seagoing folks, and solved other underwater crises. The stories were lean and straightforward pulp narratives with no room for subtleties like deep characterization, subplots, or subtext. Bridge’s gruff and matter-of-fact narration of the underwater sequences makes the series oddly diverting, even when viewed with jaded twenty-first century eyes.

    What makes the show especially relevant for local history is that much of it was filmed on location in the Bahamas, Florida, and, for a couple seasons, the Long Beach area — especially Naples, the Long Beach peninsula, Alamitos Bay, and the newly built Long Beach Marina. The above-water locales in many of the show’s episodes serve as a visual catalog of the Long Beach area as it existed in the late fifties. I’ve never seen an episode filmed specifically in Seal Beach, but Seal Beach landmarks are often featured prominently in the background in scenes shot on the Long Beach Marina.

    One episode did feature a Seal Beach landmark prominently, so much so that it appears in the episode’s title card.

    In the second season’s “Underwater Security,” Mike is hired by the military to go undercover to test the security of a seaside rocket fuel plant and ends up foiling the plans of actual saboteurs. Seal Beach residents tuning in to that night’s “Sea Hunt” episode on January 19th, 1959 would have been surprised to see the Seal Beach power plant passing itself off as the rocket fuel factory. The episode itself was probably filmed in late 1958.

    (There’s a very mild irony in that an actual rocket assembly facility would be constructed in a few years on the other end of town to build the second stage of the Apollo program’s Saturn rockets.)

    You can watch “Underwater Security” below.

    And here’s a link to a YouTube playlist for all the “Sea Hunt” episodes. If you see Seal Beach appearing in any episodes, please share the show’s title in the comments section. I don’t have time to go through all the episodes, but if we all crowdsource the project, maybe we can create a comprehensive index of Seal Beach appearances in “Sea Hunt.”

    Other films using Seal Beach include the silent version of “Ten Commandments” and the first Billy Jack movie, “Born Losers.”

    – Michael Dobkins

    I won’t resume daily blogging here until 2024, but I’m trying out a new feature that I hope won’t take as much writing, researching, and prep time. For lack of a better title, I’m calling this new feature, “Take a Look at Historical Seal Beach.”

    If you have unique photos from Seal Beach’s past that you’re willing share on this blog, please contact me at mike@SealBeachHistory.com. What I’m looking for are high resolution scanned images in either a tiff or jpeg and a few words to provide a little commentary and context on what is being shared.

    I hope to share a new post of photos (or just one photo) from a single donor each month. Currently I have images stockpiled for the rest of 2020. That leaves thirty-six months to cover from January 2021 to December 2023. With luck, there will be enough interest and response to fill those thirty-six months.

  • 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.

  • August 22nd in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1926, the 7:15 p.m. Pacific Electric red car west bound on the Seal Beach to Long Beach line made an unexpected detour at First Street and Ocean Avenue. 

    Normally, the red car would continue across the Ocean Avenue bridge to the Long Beach Peninsula. This time it took an unexpected turn on the sharply curved spur tracks into the Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corporation steam plant property. It crashed through the gates, but the motorman was able to slow the car enough to avoid derailment, and the only injury was his bruised elbow.

    This March 11, 1933 photo shows the spur tracks into the steam plant property in the asphalt at lower left bottom. (You can also see damage to the steam plant from the Long Beach earthquake.)
    This March 11, 1933 photo shows the spur tracks into the steam plant property in the asphalt in the bottom left half of the photo. You can also see damage from the Long Beach earthquake.

    Philip A. Stanton, founder of Seal Beach, witnessed the incident from the front porch of his home on the corner of that intersection. He had actually seen a man with a young boy turn the switch immediately in front of his house a few minutes earlier, but Stanton had assumed the man was a Pacific Electric employee.

    1933-1940s DWP copy copy
    A better view of the Stanton house from where he saw the incident. The switch in front of the house appears to have been removed. This photo was taken after the taller steam plant stack was replaced with this shorter one due to the 1933 earthquake damage.

    The Pacific Electric abandoned this line in February of 1940, the bridge to the Long Beach peninsula was removed in 1955, and the steam plant was torn down in 1967. The Pacific Electric tracks of the spur leading into the power plant property still remained well into the seventies — decades past when the last red car rode down Ocean Avenue.

    Addendum – There seems to be more little curiosity about the steam plant in response to today’s post. You can find links to earlier posts and photos (including footage and photos from the demolition from Joyce Kucera) here.

    – 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.

     

  • May 27th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1926, the Santa Ana Register published this gushingly enthusiastic profile of Seal Beach with a photo spread.

    In my Seal Beach research over the years, I’ve come across some wild feats of hyperbole, but I think the first three paragraphs in this article have all other beat.

    In spite of its manic lack of restraint, this article provides a solid snapshot of what Seal Beach was in 1926 and what it was trying to present itself as to the world. (This does not include the whopper about the single drowning or the claims of safety. Whoof, such mendacity!)

    So I’m going to quote the entire article and include the photos with commentary after the article.

    SEAL BEACH’S NO UNDERTOW CLAIM BRINGS MANY VISITORS

    ———————–

    Safety Factor Is Stressed By Residents of Town; Commerce Body Active

    ———————–

    BIG POWER PLANT TO BE ENLARGED

    ———————–

    Vehicular Bridge Across Outer Channel of Bay Backed by Community

    ———————–

    When Mother Nature chiseled the coast line of what was destined to Southern California, she gave particular attention to one favored spot, saying: “Here I will create a beach that will provide safe bathing for mankind, especially the women and little children.”

    With this end in view, she formed two Inland bays with entrances from the Pacific ocean nearly a mile apart, and between these she made a gradually sloping sandy beach free from dangerous riptides and strong undertow.

    Neither time nor tides have changed this condition, and since the early days of civilization in Southern California, what is now known as the city of Seal Beach has been recognized as one beach where surf bathing is safe.

    Surf Bathing Safe.

    The greatest degree of safety in the surf is between two bays, Anaheim and Alamitos. Although thousands go into the surf there every season, so far as known there has been but one drowning, and that near the Alamitos bay channel, when a man who could not swim attempted to negotiate the breakers on a hastily constructed raft.

    The safe condition of safety exists in Anaheim bay inside the bridge, but bathers are warned to keep away from the outer channel with its deep water and treacherous currents.

    For these reasons, many inland people spend their summer vacations at Seal Beach and Anaheim Landing, which is a part of the city, and it is believed the greatest number of summer visitors will be accommodated this year, because there are many cottages and tents available for summer use.

    Arrange Housing Facilities

    The chamber of commerce has taken up the matter of providing housing facilities for summer visitors and complete details may be had by writing to Harry H. Newton, the secretary.

    Besides safe bathing, Seal Beach offers many other attractions, such as boating on the bay, excellent fishing and various amusements, one of these being a large dancing pavilion. There is also a roller coaster and other concessions in the amusement zone.

    Seal Beach derives its name from the large herds of seal that have made their home here since the memory of man. They can be seen at the mouth of Alamitos bay, near the big power plant, in their natural habitat, being an attraction for tourists from all over the world. Plans are forming for a seal park, this being a part of the scheme for a vehicular bridge across the outer cannel of Alamitos bay.

    History of Town

    In 1903 P. A. Stanton and I. A. Lothian purchased 200 acres of land on the ocean front between Anaheim and Alamitos bays. The land was platted and the new town given the name of Bay City. In 1915, It was incorporated as a city of the sixth class under the name of Seal Beach, in honor of the large herd of seals.

    Seal Beach has a municipal water system, sewers, electricity, gas and many miles of permanently paved streets.

    Although the incorporated limits of Seal Beach include approximately 800 acres, only 200 acres are in the platted portion, the balance being a part of the Hellman ranch. This ranch land will not be available for homesites until after the question of oil is determined. Drilling operations are being conducted on the property by the Associated Oil company, but so far without any favorable showings. Executors of the Hellman estate say if prospecting operations prove the land is barren of oil in paying quantities, they will subdivide the portion in Seal Beach and put it on the market for homesites. The Hellman hill is declared to be one of the most desirable places in Southern California for this purpose.

    Seal Beach is located on the South Coast highway. Within 15-mile radius of Seal Beach, there are 25 towns that, with intervening territory, have a combined population of more than a quarter of a million people.

    Bridge Project

    A project is under way for building a vehicular bridge across the outer channel of Alamitos bay that will connect Ocean boulevard in Long Beach with Ocean avenue in Seal Beach. Preliminary plans for the structure will soon be completed.

    Will Enlarge Plant

    On the point overlooking the entrance to Alamitos bay is located the Seal Beach electric generating station of the Los Angeles Gas and Electric corporation. The first unit of the plant was placed in operation last July. When completed the plant will consist of three units of 48,000 horsepower each and the total cost will be approximately $15,000,000. The second unit will be started next year.

    The three boilers of the first unit have a capacity of 175,000 pounds of steam each, and the giant smokestack stands 275 feet high, a landmark seen from many miles distant.

    Electric energy is generated here and distributed in Los Angeles over a high-power transmission line.

    Chamber Is Active

    Seal Beach has an active chamber of commerce, of which W. D. Miller, president of the California State bank, is president, and Harry H. Newton, secretary. The organization has accomplished much in the way of civic development and is taking a leading part in the project of a vehicular bridge across the Alamitos bay channel.

    Mrs. E. W. Reed is president of the Woman’s Improvement club and Mrs. Merle Armstrong is secretary. There is a Business Men’s club, of which A. W. Armstrong is president and Harry H. Newton, secretary.

    Seal Beach Is proud of its public school system. It has a fine group of buildings with a competent corps of teachers. The district at present has only a grammar school, being affiliated with the Huntington Beach high school district.

    Two churches, Methodist and Catholic, provide places of worship, and there is a growing Masonic lodge.

    R. E. Dolley is president of the board of trustees. Other members of the board are J. P. Transue, A. E. Walker,  J. R. John and C. O. Wheat. Mrs. Ollie B. Padrick is city clerk and Ira E. Patterson is treasurer.

    Altogether, Seal Beach offers unusual attractions for either the home seeker or the vacationist.

    Here are enlarged versions of the photos from the Santa Ana Register spread.

    – 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.

  • February 20th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1924, The Santa Ana Register announced that work was to begin within two weeks to build a spur line for delivery of materials into the Los Angeles Gas and Electric property where the power plant was being constructed. The spur line connected to the Pacific Electric tracks that ran into Seal Beach from the Long Beach peninsula along Ocean Avenue. These tracks could still be seen at First Street for years after the power plant was demolished in 1967.

    – 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.

  • February 6th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1937, the Seal Beach city council considered a number of matters in a long session, according to the Santa Ana Register.

    The first item considered was a petition with one hundred sixty-eight signers declaring an oil refinery operating at Fifth Street and Coast Highway a public nuisance and asking for the refinery’s removal. The refinery was owned by the California Refining Company and was leased to F. B. Cole Refining, plaintiffs in a $110,000 suit against the city. According to the petition, the refinery had a negative impact of the health and property of nearby residents.

    Another issue discussed was the installation of an additional power line from the steam plant operated by the Los Angeles Gas and Electrical Corporation to its new owner, the bureau of water and power (Today’s Department of Water and Power, also known as the DWP). The issue was ultimately tabled, but not before City Attorney B. B. Brown expressed concerns about the impact water outfall from the plant preventing build-up of sands on the west beach.  

    Representatives from Los Angeles expressed a willingness to work out a solution to the beach problem with the help of the Los Angeles county flood control district, but that would depend on the new owners. It was also mentioned that the Seal Beach steam plant would soon become a stand-by power plant as soon as the Boulder Dam plant went online, and that would probably diminish the water outfall from the Seal Beach plant.

    City Engineer Victor W. Hayes was instructed to remove old poles along East Ocean Avenue that had been abandoned for years by an amusement company. Hayes also reported that, after consulting the Coast Guard, removal of pilings from a collapsed section of the pier must be requested from the war department.

    The Pacific Electric Company reported that materials for work on the Twelfth Street grade crossing had been ordered and that the city could  begin paving between the tracks after the track and signal work was complete. Hayes submitted plans and an estimate for the city’s share of the costs for the project.

    Finally, a third reading of a “Walkathon” ordinance was made that would clear the way for an event to be held after the rainy season. The ordinance required a deposit of $500.

    Walkathons were dancing endurance contests that were both popular and controversial during the Great Depression. Read “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” by Horace McCoy or watch the film to get a flavor of what these events were like.

    This ordinance and the event it allowed would cause conflict and controversy in August and September of 1937. Watch this space.

    – 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.

  • January 14th In Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1924, the Santa Ana Register reported that the Bayside Land Company had applied to the War Department for permission to dredge in Alamitos Bay and to use the dredged material as landfill for a new tract of land to the north of the coast highway at the west side of Seal Beach.

    It’s often hard to picture the old geography of Seal Beach from written descriptions and fit it to the current layout of the city. Here’s a closer view of a section of the 1922 photograph from above:

    Okay, maybe that helps a little, but some labels might make today’s post easier to understand:

    The old coast highway followed along the south edge of Alamitos Bay just to the left of Central Way (not Central Avenue). It then connected to Naples at Iona Walk. (Later the coast highway would be rerouted to connect to Naples along the street now called East Naples Plaza, but until the Long Marina was built, East Naples Plaza was just the eastern most part of Second Street in Naples.)

    If you’ve ever wondered why Central Way follows such a crooked path between First Street and Fifth Street, it’s because Central Way followed what was once the marshy edge of Alamitos Bay in Seal Beach before it was filled with dredged materials.

    Today’s Pacific Coast Highway did not exist in 1922 when this photo was taken, but its approximate route is labeled. Also missing is the steam plant at First Street and Ocean Avenue. It was constructed in 1925.

    The Pacific Electric bridge to Naples connected to what is now Appian Way close to where the Long Beach Yacht Club in the Long Beach Marina stands.

    Just below First Street, you can see the Ocean Avenue bridge to the Long Beach Peninsula. In 1922, the bridge only connected rail traffic from the Pacific Electric line to Seal Beach that ran down Ocean Avenue to Main Street and then turned to meet the Pacific Electric Newport-Balboa line at Electric Avenue. Automobile traffic didn’t cross along Ocean Avenue to the Long Beach peninsula until a new Ocean Avenue bridge was built in the thirties.

    – 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.

  • Seal Beach Electric Station – 1924

    Judging by our web traffic stats, the power plant that stood at Ocean Avenue and First Street from 1925 to 1967 has been the most popular of all the Seal Beach history covered in this blog.  Our first post on the steam plant took a photographic tour through the four decades of the plant’s existence, and you can find it here.  Our next two posts showcased photos and a video by Joyce Kucera of the final days of the steam plant as it was being demolished and you can see the photos here and watch the video here.

    Today’s post will probably be our last on the steam plant for awhile, so it is fitting that we are going back to the very beginning of the Seal Beach power plant.  The bulk of this post is an article published in the May-June-July, 1924 issue of The L. A. Gas Monthly.  This article came to us courtesy of Eric Lawson who runs a web site dedicated to the historical aspects of The Southern California Gas Co. called Gastorical.com.

    The article is written from a technical perspective and may be a little more than the average layman needs to know, but it is still fascinating.  Not only does it listed some of the dimensions and physical features of the still being constructed steam plant, but the article includes some amazing photographs from the early stages of construction.  Our local landmark was an example of cutting edge technology when it was built.  The steam plant went online in July 1925, and it is amazing that the technology so glowingly described in the article was obsolete a mere twenty-six years later when the plant was closed for good in 1951.

    The author is a gentleman named J. Grady Rollow.  In late 1920, he left his position as a chemical engineer with E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company (known to most of us today as DuPont) to become a consulting engineer with the Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corporation.  In 1919 and 1920, Mr. Rollow had written articles given slide presentations about designing boiler plants, and his new position gave him an opportunity to design and build a modern steam boiler plant based on his ideas and expertise.  As mentioned before, this following article is a piece of dry, technical writing, but it is hard not to detect Mr. Rollow’s pride and excited anticipation of the project coming to completion.  Mr. Rollow remained a lead engineer for the Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corporation well into the thirties and probably was also involved in the repairs and installation of the shorter smoke stack after the Long Beach earthquake.

    ————————————-

    Seal Beach Electrical Station

    by. J. G. Rollow, Electrical Engineer

    During the summer of 1923 it became apparent that the electrical business of the Corporation would require a new generating station by the winter of 1925, as the old electric station would reach its maximum development with the installation of the 23,000 h.p. turbo-generator during 1924.

    The raw materials necessary for the generation of electrical energy with steam plants are water and fuel–about 330 times as much water as fuel being required.  The third important item is the transportation (or transmission) of the finished product from the point of manufacture to the areas where it is to be used.  The large amount of water required is not used up, as we say, but merely used as a cooling medium for condensing the steam after it has passed through the turbines; hence it is necessary to dispose of this water, or extract the heat from it and use it over again.  Therefore, there must be double transportation on this very large item, or expensive apparatus such as cooling towers must be installed.  Such apparatus requires large areas, the cost of which in the city (where the energy is used) is prohibitive.  After giving due consideration to the cost transporting the three main requisites, it was decided to build the plant at the ocean.  Having reached this decision, it was next necessary to choose the location.  Every inch of the coast from Topanga Canyon to the inlet of Newport Bay was studied, with the result that Seal Beach was chosen, because:  (1) the water is free from sewage and sea-weed,  (2) the ground is better for foundations, (3) it is close to fuel supply, and, (4) transmission lines will not be excessive in length.

    The Schedule

    The site was purchased about the first of this year and ground was broken April 1.  Plans for a station of 288,000 h.p. capacity have been drawn.  During this year buildings sufficient to house two turbo-generator units will be built, and the first one of 48,000 h.p. capacity will be in operation by July 1, 1925.

    This plant will be designed and equipped to give the maximum fuel economy that the best engineers of the country know how to obtain with steam plants.  The first unit will have three boilers, each capable of generating 175,000 lbs. of steam per hour continuously, at 385 lbs. gauge pressure.  Each boiler will be equipped with a forced draft fan which will draw air from out-of-doors through a pre-heater, where it will be heated to 200 degrees F., and discharge it into the furnaces to supply combustion.  The pre-heaters will use heat from the stack gases, which is ordinarily wasted.  From the boilers the steam will pass through superheaters which will raise its temperature to 700 F. in order to get the highest efficiency from it in the turbines.

    The Science of It

    The large amount of condensing water required is made necessary by the fact that when a pound of water is converted into steam, 970 British Thermal Units of heat are “used up.”  That is, this quantity of heat enters into the process without raising the temperature of the medium.  It is called “latent heat.”  When the steam is condensed, in order to relieve the turbine from exhausting against atmospheric pressure, this latent heat appears again.  It is picked up by the condensing water and entirely wasted ordinarily.  During recent years engineers have found that by extracting some of the steam at various stages of its passage through the turbine, a considerable portion of the latent heat can be recovered and utilized for heating the boiler feed-water.  This process is called “stage bleeding.”  The first unit at Seal Beach will be equipped for four-stage bleeding which is as far as the process can be carried economically at this date.

    All of the auxiliaries are electrically driven and are supplied from a house generator which is on the end of the shaft of the main unit.  This arrangement gives as high economy on the small apparatus as on the main unit, which could not be done with individual steam drive.

    A High Stack

    One of the unusual features of the plant will be the smokestack, which will be 375 feet high and large enough to take the gases from six of the big boilers running at their maximum ratings.  This tremendous chimney will be of reinforced concrete and will be supported on the steel structure of the building above the center of the boiler room.

    The current will be generated at 13,200 volts and stepped up to 110,000.  It will be transmitted on a steel tower line to a step-down substation licated in the city limits as near to the load center as is economical to build.

    Click on the image to see the original article

    Click on the image to see the original article

    – 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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  • That Colossal Wreck, Boundless and Bare

    Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corp. Steam Plant – 1967

    Today’s post is a companion piece to this earlier post featuring film footage of the steam plant being demolished in 1967.  Joyce Kucera, who provided the footage in the earlier post found some photographs taken on the same day and has once again generously shared them with us.

    There’s something stately and dignified about the husk of this grand old building.  The film footage was exciting to watch, but these color photographs evoked the same vivid fascination I felt as a youngster witnessing the steam plant slowly disappearing day by day. I wonder if I was just a little further down First Street when these shots were taken.

    Thank you so much for going to the trouble to find these, Joyce.

    click on the image for a larger view

    click on the image for a larger view

    click on the image for a larger view

    An earlier post offered more details on the steam plant’s history in Seal Beach.

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

    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. 

  • Demolition Plant

    Los Angeles Gas and Electric Corp. Steam Plant – 1967

    One of our more popular posts featured the power plant that once dominated the Seal Beach landscape on First Street.

    Seal Beach resident Joyce Kucera just recently rediscovered her home movie footage of some of the actual demolition of the plant filmed back in 1967 and has generously agreed  to share it with us.

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgTCG_Saa4o&fs=1&hl=en_US]

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


    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. 

    Bookmark and Share