A look back -- Jerry Person
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Our Fourth of July parade is now history and our residents are looking
forward to a wild and wonderful summer in ‘ole Huntington Beach. I
thought you might like to see how an earlier generation passed the time
and what was happening here in the summer of 1915.
In that long ago time we didn’t think about surfing or swimming in our
blue Pacific waters.
Most people then didn’t even know how to swim and that’s why when you
dig out that old photo album of you grandmothers, you see only people
wadding in the water close to shore in their woolen bathing suits.
So what did people do on a hot August day in Huntington Beach?
Well, the big event in August was the arrival of the men in blue, no,
not the Navy, but those old soldiers who fought for the Union in the
Civil War.
The Southern California Veteran Assn. of the southern posts of the
Grand Army of the Republic came down for its 28th annual reunion and
stayed at the Huntington Beach Tent City at Orange Avenue and 11th
Street.
They called their camp the Thomas B. Hartsell camp that year and
placed Commander A.M. Brown in charge.
Others in command included Vice Commander L. Scofield and Junior Vice
Commander W.A. Packard.
On the Army’s first night in town, Huntington Beach Mayor E.E. French
welcomed them and as was the custom of the time, that first night was
known as Huntington Beach night.
I understand that many of the veterans were running late for the 7
p.m. program and our mayor was forced to repeat his welcome message.
The entertainment for the evening was provided by our town’s Woman’s
Relief Corps.
The music for the evening’s program was strictly Huntington Beach in
the form of local talent with the best part consisting of 24 very young
local girls.
Each girl wore a white dress and half of the girls wore red ties and
hair ribbons and the other half wore blue ties and hair ribbons and they
all marched on stage and carried American flags. When they all came
together it was all red, white and blue.
These girls were under the direction of Marie Bushard and Mrs. R.H.
Dow.
Some of those girls who marched that night were Helen Newland, Vera
Bushard, Audra Brunton, Pauline Manning, Gladys Wardlow, Elsie Lake and
Margaret French.
Next came the dancing duo of Frances Fink and 9-year-old Marian Clark.
This was followed by another 9-year-old, Harry Jonas, who played a
musical composition by Paderewski on the piano.
The Lost Chord, a comedy sketch written by a local boy, Charles
Decker, was performed by Fred Gallienne and Clarence Hunt.
The act I would have loved to see was the Leona Quartet composed of
Lawrence Worthy, Clarence Hunt, Fred Gallienne and William “Bill”
Gallienne.
The evening concluded with Alita Brunton, Dessie Carroll, Margaret
Lockhart, Louise Jenson, Elsie Seymour, Olive Hill and Helen Steans
singing “Good Night Soldiers.”
There were other happenings around town but this was the biggest.
Charles Lange had driven down from Anaheim in his motor car and when
he returned home he found that he had lost his valuable gold pocket
watch. He called up city Marshal John Tinsley, but before Tinsley could
do anything about it, Lange discovered it on his footboard of his car. He
again called Tinsley and told him that if it had been any other town, the
watch would not have been there.
The residents living on 12th Street were complaining that their gas
street lights weren’t burning regularly.
The final episode of the film “The Black Box” was showing at the
Princess Theatre on Main Street.
Little John Murdy, Jr., left town with the Orange County YMCA for a
two-week stay on Catalina Island.
George Finlayson was promoted to assistant superintendent and Grover
DeLapp to foreman at the old Holly Sugar factory out on Main Street and
Garfield Avenue.
Somehow this just isn’t as exciting as any weekend in the Downtown
today. But this was a gentler time in our history and certainly less
stressful.
But in five years, the oil boom would change the pace of life in
Huntington Beach forever and that pace of life is still moving faster and
faster toward, well, we will just have to wait and see.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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