Tag: Woman’s Club

  • September 5th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1963, the Woman’s Club of Seal Beach held an open house for members to meet 16-year old Benjamin Gal-Lang Maynigo, the exchange student the club was sponsoring. 

    Benjamin hailed from the town of Rosales in the Philippine Islands and stayed with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bauchwitz at 1630 Marlin Way while attending Huntington Beach High School. Benjamin came from a family of educators. His mother taught elementary school, and his father was the Rosales superintendent of schools.

    The open house was held at Mrs. James L. Facer’s home at 1729 Catalina Avenue.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • May 31st in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1935, the Santa Ana Register reported that the Woman’s Club of Seal Beach had installed a new set of officers at a dish luncheon where Mrs. J. H. McGinnis and Mrs. C. C. Bonebrake were guests of honor. The committee in charge of the luncheon and officer installation was a roster of past club presidents ( and some familiar names elsewhere in Seal Beach history): retiring club president Wilma Sisk, Mary Taylor, Bernice Johnson, and Jessie Reed.

    The new officers were Anna Collier as president, Dagmar Schmidt as first vice president,  Wilma Sisk as second vice president,  Bernice Johnson as recording secretary, Andrea Mecham as responding secretary, Grace Haskell as treasurer, Mrs. Monte Howard as historian, and Jessie Reed as parliamentarian.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • March 18th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1956 at 2 p.m., on the spot where Bay Boulevard met Electric Avenue, a dedication ceremony was held for a monument designating Anaheim Landing as a historical landmark. The marker read:

    ANAHEIM LANDING After the establishment of the Mother Colony at Anaheim in 1857, a wharf and warehouse were constructed at the mouth of Anaheim Creek to serve the Santa Ana Valley. Treacherous entrance conditions caused several disasters, but steamers loaded with wine, wool and other cargo continued to dock here regularly. Use of the seaport began to decline in 1875 with the incursion of the Southern Pacific Railroad into the area. By 1890, the landing was no longer in operation.

    (This was not the first Anaheim Landing. The landing was originally established in 1864 on Alamitos Bay, a more ideal port for shipping, but when an 1867 flood filled the bay with silt and severely limited ocean access, the landing was relocated to what is now known as Anaheim Bay. Local historian Larry Strawther has established that the original landing was approximately where the Island Village tract is today.)

    Eleven years earlier almost to the day of the dedication ceremony, Anaheim Landing’s days as a civilian shipping port, a recreational destination, and residential neighborhood ended when the U.S. Navy took possession of Anaheim Bay and Anaheim Landing to install a weapons depot. On the other side of the fence behind the marker, munitions were loaded and unloaded to and from Navy ships serving in the Pacific Ocean.

    On the civilian side of the fence, a crowd celebrated Anaheim Landing’s past. Perhaps some in that crowd had been Anaheim Landing residents and felt wistful recalling earlier days of swimming, boating, and fishing in the bay before the Navy removed their homes and cottages and dredged it.

    Installing the marker had been a community affair. The project was instigated by the Senior and Junior Women’s Clubs of Seal Beach. Mrs. Bernice V. Smith and Mrs. Sven Lindstrom researched the historical data. Buell Brown designed the seven-foot high monument. Frank Curtis poured the foundation. The local Girl Scout and Cub Scout troops and Veterans organizations gathered the stones that were used in the monument, and surplus stones formed a crescent shaped rock garden on either side of the monument.

    The theme for the ceremony was “Preserve the Past for the Future.” Scout troops presented mixed colors, Mrs. Noel Chadwick gave the devotional, and the Woman’s Club chorus sang a musical piece under the direction of Mrs. Clyde Spencer.

    Officiating the ceremony were Willis Warner, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, Lee Winterton and William Gallienne of the Associated Chambers of Commerce, Admiral John McKinney, William Hynds of the recreation development committee, M.K. Hillyard of the marker committee, and Mrs. Albert Sylvia of the Woman’s Club of Seal Beach, and Mrs. Larry Howard of the Junior Woman’s Club of Seal Beach.

    It must have been fine and proud Saturday event for all parties involved.

    The Anaheim Landing monument still stands today, but somewhat diminished. Bay Boulevard is now Seal Beach Boulevard, the monument was moved to make room for a public works lot, and the rock garden is gone, replaced by a couple of bushes and a bus stop.

    – Michael Dobkins


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  • January 10th in Seal Beach History

    On this date in 1934, the Woman’s Club of Seal Beach held its monthly business meeting. Mrs. C. C. Violett of Garden Grove extended an invitation to the members to attend a special health program in Garden Grove on January 26th. Mrs. Fred Smith spoke on “International Relations.” It was also decided to arrange a party for the young people of Seal Beach, and Mrs. Mary Tyler and Mrs. Howard were enlisted to make arrangements.

    This local institution is still active today. Click here for more information.

    – 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.