Tag: Southern California

  • 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.

  • Patricia Keller McCormick

    May 12th, 1930 – March 7th, 2023

    Long time Seal Beach resident and Olympic gold medalist Pat McCormick passed away yesterday at age 92.

    There will be finer tributes and fuller accounts of her lifetime of accomplishments in the days to come than I can offer here. What I would like to share is the earliest profile of Pat McCormick I could find. This was printed in the July 15th, 1951 San Francisco Examiner when 21 year-old Pat McCormick was preparing to compete in the national swimming championships the year before she won the gold in the 3-meter springboard and 10-meter platform diving events at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games.

    Her name had been mentioned in earlier sports coverage, but the editors of the paper and writer Gus Steiger choose this time to focus an entire story on McCormick and the commitment required for her to obtain her level of athletic excellence.

    Patricia McCormick Eyes New Swimming Laurels 

    By Gus Steiger 

    DETROIT, July 14

    “What beauty’ What grace! What form!” the appreciative spectator murmur as the young lady zooms off the high dive board, cuts a figure in a flowing continuity of motion and plummets into the water like a perpendicular arrow. Diving, as it concerns the agile female, is the most graceful of sports competition — its participants the most beautiful. 

    It is assured, there will be the usual quantity of “O-o-o-hs” and “Ah-h-h-hs” emanating from the onlookers when little Patricia Keller McCormick and rivals for her titles display their diving skill at the national swimming championships in Detroit beginning July 25. 

    But few there will be among the spectators who will possess an awareness of the long years and the many, many hours of practice, the determination in the face of recurrent, and sometime serious, injury and the courage demanded of a diving champion. 

    It’s something in which you start young and keep everlastingly at it. That is true of Mrs. McCormick and the foes she will encounter in Detroit. Pat presently is a grand slam champion, something never before achieved in her field. She won all three outdoor diving titles — one meter, three meter and platform — at High Point, N. C, last August and followed with victories in the one meter and three-meter Indoor tests at Houston, Tex., more than two months ago. 

    WON TITLE AT 14

    Such eminence was not attained overnight. She was born at Seal Beach, near Santa Monica in California, displayed an affinity for the water as a babe and later on took to diving, showing marked skill for this form of endeavor by the time she was 10 years old. 

    At 14 she won the women’s one meter diving cup and from mat point on concentrated on her diving career. 

    Pat McCormick and those of her ilk go leaping off diving boards from 20,000 to 23,000 times a year. A day’s workout means from 70 to 100 dives and it is quite easy to see how this soon runs into thousands, and into hundreds of thousands the enumerating encompasses a career. 

    Assuming the young lady operates on a six-day diving week, it has been estimated that in a ten year span, she will have made 200,000 dives, floated through more than 350 miles of ozone and made another 625 miles under water. 

    When preparing for an event of the importance of the forthcoming nationals in Detroit, Mrs. McCormick puts in a six and one-half hour day at the Olympic Stadium pool in Los Angeles. Five of these hours, split into morning and early evening sessions, are devoted to work on the tower, about thirty dives in each period. A ninety-minute post luncheon drill is on the springboards, involving about twenty-five dives. 

    The late Georgia Coleman, vivacious 1932 fancy diving Olympic champion, was typical of this attitude. “You like to dive, don’t you?” she was asked once by an admirer.

    “I just love it,” Georgia responded. “When I am on the high board before taking off, it’s like being on top of the world. Then when I’m in my dive I have the feeling of a bird sailing through the air.” 

    There are exercises that also are part of the diver’s training program and a girl like Mrs. McCormick must watch her weight continually. 

    SPECIAL TRAINING

    There is torture too to be encountered. At one time Pat’s coach, Rusty Smith of the Los Angeles AC thought she was losing points because she wasn’t pointing her toes sufficiently. He had a board rigged up with two rungs on it. 

    “Keep your feet in this thing,” he admonished her, “while you sleep through the night it will stretch your feet into shape.” So Pat slept in that unnatural and uncomfortable way just to give her tootsies the proper angle. 

    Besides torture, this aquatic specie is susceptible to injury. Pat has suffered chipped teeth and a broken rib by hitting the heavy board as she failed to clear on a dive. On one such occasion she almost unhinged her jaw. Other girls have sustained broken noses and have had fractured skulls. The current champion has absorbed welts and bruises on the chest and shoulders by not hitting the water properly when dunking herself at a mile-a-minute speed.

    In addition to her own accomplishments, Patricia McCormick was also our one living degree of historical separation from the early heyday of Seal Beach’s joy zone entertainment as detailed in this post covering July 30th, 1916 in Seal Beach history.

    – -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.

  • 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

  • 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.

  • 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


    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.

  • 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


    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.

  • 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


    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.

     

  • 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


    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.

  • 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!


    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.

  • June 18th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1978, the Los Angeles Times reported that Seal Beach had presented its City Beautification Award to the newly remodeled Seal Beach Mall, located at 311 Main Street. Architect Richard Grossgold had designed the renovation for developers Thomas E. Hyams and Richard Doyle.

    It had previously an industrial building and home to various tenants over the years, such as California Artists, a greeting cards publisher, the Seal Beach post office, an electronics manufacturer named Trans Com West, a ticket sales call center, and even a gymnastics school. After the remodel, the Seal Beach Mall offered sixteen shops in a 12,000 square foot space and is still in business today over forty years later.

    – 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.