WILLIAM GALLIENNE
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
When William Gallienne arrived as a teenager in 1910, Huntington Beach
was a sleepy little town with no paved streets, no street lights and only
one cafe. But he had a vision of the city as a major resort destination,
which he tirelessly promoted as secretary manager of the Chamber of
Commerce.
When Gallienne started working for the chamber, you couldn’t wake this
town up, said Alicia Wentworth, 73, a resident since 1947. He stirred some excitement, she said.
Serving as the city’s main booster during his 30-year career, Gallienne
orchestrated the Fourth of July and Christmas parades, Black Gold Days
celebrations, and a convention known as the Twin-O-Ramas, when twins from
all over the country gathered in Huntington Beach during the 1940s and
1950s.
His take-charge attitude in countless civic events earned him the
nickname “El Generalissimo.”
“Anything that was Huntington Beach, he was involved in,” said Jerry
Person, a local historian whose columns regularly appear in the
Independent. “He basically ran the city.”
The city’s top public relations man was blessed with a fine tenor voice
and a flare for showmanship. He promoted and performed in the Huntington
Beach Municipal Band. During Sunday afternoon concerts at the beach,
Gallienne would bring tears to people’s eyes when he played solos such as
“Till the Sands of the Desert Grow Cold.”
This sunny seaside town was a long way from the place of his birth in
1895 on the island of Guernsey, between England and France. In 1910, he
immigrated with his family to America. After arriving in New York, he
traveled west to Los Angeles before taking the Pacific Electric’s Red Car
to what became his adopted home.
Gallienne served as secretary manager of the chamber until his death in
1965. His funeral was one of the largest ever held in the county. All 25
Chamber of Commerce directors acted as honorary pallbearers. George
Putnam, a popular Los Angeles newscaster, delivered a eulogy to Gallienne
on the evening news.
The city now welcomes 11 million visitors annually, and in addition to
the Waterfront Hilton, at least two more hotels along the shoreline are
in the works. Gallienne’s dream of making Huntington Beach a vacation
getaway has largely been realized.
Source: “Huntington Beach, the Gem of the South Coast” by Diann Marsh
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