There’s not much to say about this image except that the more things change, the more they stay the same. Put this group in modern swim fashions, and this pose would not be out-of-place on our beach this weekend. They certainly look like they were having fun that day on the beach at Anaheim Landing. I hope the four of them had many days like this one in their lives.
The lucky gentleman with his arms around the legs of those ladies is wearing an “Anaheim Landing” shirt. I wonder if he was renting his swim gear from a local concessionaire?
– Michael Dobkins
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This aerial shot provides a topsy-turvy angle on the early days of the Seal Beach trailer park long before it was remodeled in the early 1980s.
– Michael Dobkins
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Here’s a new angle on the burger stand that once stood in front of the Bayside Land Company building at Main Street and Ocean Avenue. Ocean Avenue runs behind the stand in the darkness. This appears to be in the early days of the burger stand before the top was adorned with signs for Coca-Cola and Carnation ice cream. You can see this same building a few years later from the opposite angle in our earlier posts, Tramming It Up and Sleepy Afternoon on Main Street.
The poster in the window to the right reads, “The Flavor You Favor,” but the rest of the poster is obscured by the intense lighting used to take this photo. What product was being advertised, I wonder?
ADDENDUM:
A little fiddling on the poster in photoshop gave a little more detail in the poster:
Diced Cream was an ice cream product introduced in 1947 by Arden Farms. Chunks of different flavors of ice cream were sold separately in small boxes the same way a pint of Ben and Jerry’s is sold today. Diced Cream initially rolled out in a sales test in the Long Beach area in 1947 before being introduced to the entire Southern California market. According to the August 2nd, 1947 Billboard magazine the product sponsored “Hail To The Champ,” a local program on Long Beach radio station KGER. The poster in today’s photo was probably part of this initial sales test.
Here’s a better looking Diced Cream ad from Life Magazine in 1949:
Obviously, I have more important things to be doing. Otherwise I would not have allowed myself to be distracted by such a minor mystery.
Be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach.
– Michael Dobkins
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Main Street in Seal Beach has been a favorite subject for photographers throughout its 95 years of history. Every Monday between now and the end of the Seal Beach Founders Celebration, we’ll be posting a different image of Main Street.
This is Main Street 48 years ago, not last year’s Seal Beach Car Show.
On the right, Marina Cleaners occupies the current location of Seal Beach Music. On the side of the building where Endless Summer operates today, a painted advertisement tells us, “Bathers Welcome,” apparently to come inside and enjoy “cold drinks” and “malts” and “sundaes” made from delicious “Mountain View ice cream.” Next door is Seal Beach Music, followed by the Edgewater Pre-School.
Further down, you can visit a rock shop, Vinzant’s Variety, and John’s Food King. In the distance, we see Brock’s Drugs (better known to many of us later as the Corner Drug) and further down, the Bay Theater.
On the left, it’s a little harder to make out the details. The Irisher Cafe now occupies the Bob And Chet’s Cafe and Cocktail Lounge location at 121 Main Street, Further down a Rexall drugs store occupies a familiar spot, but it’s probably a few years before it becomes Bob’s Rexall. The Walt’s Wharf building hosts the long gone Marina Market, and a cafe sign hangs in front of what was once the Green Pepper Mexican restaurant (and then BJ’s Pizza and now Woody’s Diner).
Be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach.
– Michael Dobkins
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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.
A common practice of postcard companies in the early twentieth century was to take black and white photographs and have them colorized. I thought it might be interesting show an original 1916 postcard image of the pier next to the colorized version.
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
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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.
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?
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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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It’s Monday night, and I’m working on Tuesday’s post while listening to Steve Goodman music on the twenty-sixth anniversary of his death.
You may have heard one of his songs sung by other musical artists. His most famous song, “City of New Orleans,” was a hit for Arlo Guthrie in 1972 and has been covered by Johnny Cash, Chet Atkins, Judy Collins, and Willie Nelson. Jimmy Buffett recorded many songs by Goodman, including “California Promises” and a favorite of mine, “Banana Republics.” Or if you’re a baseball fan, there’s a good chance that you’ve heard at least one of the three songs written by Chicago-born Goodman for his beloved Chicago Cubs, “A Dying Cubs Fan’s Last Request,” “When the Cubs Go Marching In,” or “Go, Cubs, Go.” He was a versatile songwriter of enormous talent and skill.
As good as Goodman’s songs are when covered by other singers, I still prefer Steve Goodman songs sung by Steve Goodman. He brings an affable intensity to his performing that is hard to resist, especially during live recordings. That’s where his charm and enthusiasm is irresistible. To give you a flavor of his performing style, I’ve found at clip from one of his Austin City Limits shows from the late seventies.
Since this is history blog, I think this song is particularly apt.
So why am I writing about Steve Goodman in a blog about Seal Beach?
Although he lived in the Chicago area most of his life, Goodman was a resident of Seal Beach during the early eighties. When I worked at The Bookstore on Main Street from 1981 to 1983, his wife, Nancy, was a regular customer, buying a copy of the Sunday Chicago Sun-News each week. His three daughters, Jessie, Sarah, and Rosanna, were all students at J.H. McGaugh School where Goodman gave a handful of classroom concerts to their lucky classmates. Red Pajamas Records, the Goodman’s private record label, was based in Seal Beach, and each day the Goodman family would cart mail order shipments to the Main Street post office.
Goodman also wrote a wistful song called, “California Promises” about empty promises. He once introduced it by saying, “This is a song about a couple who meet by the Seal Beach pier in Seal Beach, California, before the wind comes and destroys the pier. She says, ‘I’ll be right back.’”
California Promises by Steve Goodman, 1983
Beneath the moonlit sky Shadows walk beside the water Sad goodbye whispered on the shore Hear those wind chimes play They serenade the shadow lovers Ring and fade away Like California promises
I will never love another Wait for me, ’til I return But she never will He waits for her beside the water Faithful still To California promises
I will never love another Wait for me, ’til I return Though she never will He waits for her beside the water Faithful still To California promises
While the woman never comes back, the pier did get rebuilt. Sadly, Steve Goodman wouldn’t be around to see it.
(There isn’t a video of “California Promise” available for embedding, but you can listen to it directly on YouTube by clicking here.)
Back in Chicago, Steve Goodman was nicknamed “Chicago Shorty” and “The Little Prince,” but later he jokingly gave himself another nickname, “Cool Hand Leuk” in honor of his guitar prowess and the leukemia diagnosis he had been given in 1969. His illness was in remission during the seventies, and it remained a secret until the illness returned while he lived in Seal Beach. Steve Goodman was only thirty-six when he finally succumbed to the disease on September 20, 1984.
You can find more of Steve Goodman’s music atMusic Fans Direct or at iTunes if you’re a downloading sort of person. I recommend the No Big Surprise double CD album for a starter or the Steve Goodman: Live From Austin City Limits… And More! DVD if you want more of the concert shown above.
Next year in Wrigley Field, Steve.
Be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach.– Michael Dobkins
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Main Street in Seal Beach has been a favorite subject for photographers throughout its 95 years of history. Every Monday between now and the end of the Seal Beach Founders Celebration, we’ll be posting a different image of Main Street. This week’s Main Street image comes to us from Linda Buell.
(l to r) Gordon Hooper, Bob Robertson (standing behind the tram) Alan Harbour, Doug Buell, Eddie Fritz & Jack Sauters. Driver: Frank Smith.
click on the image for a larger view
This image almost duplicates last week’s Main Street image except for a great view of the much missed pier tram and a better view of the Bayside Land Company Building in the background.
Painted on the side of the white truck behind the tram are the words, “Marines March of Dimes” and “Polio Fund.” This dates the photo to no later than 1958 because that was the year the March of Dimes shifted its mission from curing polio to preventing premature birth, birth defects, and infant mortality after Jonas Salk’s polio vaccine proved effective.
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.
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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.
North American Aviation Rockwell – September 26, 1969
“… The Saturn V rocket which put us in orbit is an incredibly complicated piece of machinery, every piece of which worked flawlessly … We have always had confidence that this equipment will work properly. All this is possible only through the blood, sweat, and tears of a number of a people …All you see is the three of us, but beneath the surface are thousands and thousands of others, and to all of those, I would like to say, ‘Thank you very much.’” – Apollo 11 Command Module Pilot Michael Collins
The words above were spoken from the command module Columbia on July 23rd, 1969 , the last night of the Apollo 11 space mission before splashdown. Three days earlier, while Michael Collins orbited the moon alone, Commander Neil Armstrong and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin had become the first men to step on the surface of the Moon, making a reality of President Kennedy’s bold promise on September 12,1962 at Rice University.
(l to r) Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, “Buzz” Aldrin
Shortly after they were released from a post-mission quarantine, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins visited the North American Aviation Rockwell building in Seal Beach to thank in person the engineers and workers who had built the S-II stage of the Saturn V rocket. The following photographs were taken from a collection of 56 slides I purchased on eBay a few years. The seller had acquired the slides in the estate sale of a photographer some years earlier. Unfortunately, the seller didn’t have a record of the photographer’s name, but I’m grateful to him for documenting this historical visit to Seal Beach.
These are not all the slides from that collection, but I’m sharing just enough (and without commentary, for once) to present a full flavor of the event.
Be sure to check back each week for more historical photos and stories of Seal Beach.
– Michael Dobkins
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