Wild west Huntington Beach
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A LOOK BACK
I don’t know, maybe its me, but Huntington Beach seems to have
grown out of her wild west image, which stemmed from the days when
you walked down Main Street and saw cowpokes leaning against a horse
trough, looking into the sunset.
It was a time when men wore jeans and flannel shirts and sported
long beards, and the beautiful ladies of the town wore hoop skirts
and smiled at those same cowboys.
How, you may ask, could Huntington Beach be a wild west town when
it was founded after the gold rush and wild west era was over?
And you would be 100% right. But as you know, history has a way of
bringing the past back and that is that happened in 1939.
In that year the entire town went wild -- wild west that is.
Bill Gallienne, of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, and
the Downtown merchants came up with the idea of creating a bit of the
gold rush days right here in Huntington Beach.
A large meeting was held in the chamber’s office in early 1939 to
draft plans for a three-day “49er” celebration.
“Generalissimo” Gallienne chose June 2-4 for the town’s Cavalcade
of ’49 celebration.
The businesses along Main Street and Ocean Avenue (Pacific Coast
Highway) would sport western-looking false fronts facades to give the
feeling of being transported back to the gold rush days of the 49ers.
The men in town would be required to grow the finest crop of chin
whiskers for the event and those who didn’t grow breads would be
brought by deputy sheriffs before a judge of the ‘kangaroo kourt’ to
be locked up in jail.
The judges were real local judges -- Charles Patton, Chris Pann
and G.W. Tubbs -- and their deputy sheriffs were also locals from
town -- Ray Dolan, Roy Larson, Al Matthews, Sam Clapp, Joe Irvine.
Les Oliver, Cliff Kemp and John Dulany.
The Howard & Smith market on Main Street would be turned into a
old west trading post with logs brought in from lake Arrowhead to
make it look real. There were to be horse troughs, hitching posts and
old time wagons placed along Pacific Coast Highway and Main Street.
Our own Bill Gallienne was now wearing a stovepipe hat, frock coat
and diamond jewelry and was called Diamond Jim Gallienne.
Wearing his black Stetson hat Huntington Beach Mayor Marcus
McCallen issued a proclamation setting aside those three days in June
for the celebration.
While over at the city’s baseball field at Joliet and Huntington
streets plans were under way to turn it into a wild west rodeo
complete with bronco riding, steer wrestling and trick riding.
To get all these various events together several committees were
formed under an executive committee that included H.B. McCubbin as
chair, Al James, Marcus McCullen, Bill Gallienne, Bob DeBritton, G.W.
Tubbs, Warren J. Bristol and Roy Patrick.
To kick off the celebration the people over at the Security
Pacific Bank on Main Street began circulating 7,000 silver dollars
for use in the celebration.
A motorcade of cars left here on May 30 for an eight-hour trip
through Santa Ana, Anaheim, Buena Park, Fullerton, Long Beach,
Westminster and all points in between.
This was to advertise our event. In the motorcade was Texas
Longhorn Jim and his Hurricane Cowboys band who entertained along the
way.
Local beauty Blanche Nelk was selected the Queen of the Rodeo and
Marjorie Eader as Queen of the Beach. Police Chief Les Grant brought
his 90-year-old father W.H. Grant, who was born in 1849, down to ride
in the parade.
When the big day arrived the cavalcade begun with a torchlight
parade throughout the Downtown streets. Riding at the head of the
parade was the parade’s grand marshal
Jesse Elliott, Sheriff of Orange County followed by our mayor and
the City Council, stage coaches, covered wagons, floats, horses and
local area high school bands.
In the evening there was street dancing on Main Street, whisker
and costume contests and a 49ers carnival.
The next day saw 13 donkeys robbing the bank and afterward the
kids got to ride on these bank robbers.
Over at the converted ball field the rodeo had begun with cowboy
bucking contests, calf roping contests, wild cow milking contests,
bareback riding, bull riding, a cowboy boot race and cowboy musical
chairs.
Out on Main Street Clint Bush brought his wonder horse Serrano to
entertain the kids and there were street novelty bands for the
adults.
There was Spanish dancing provided by Al Hernandez and music of
Verdugo’s Accordion Band and in the evening more street dancing.
The last day of the celebration saw much of the same with a parade
along Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway, rodeo riding provided by
the Huntington Beach Rodeo Association, street dancing, more music
from Ben Harrison and his Cowboy Band and Texas Longhorn Jim and his
Hurricane Cowboys.
So as the last rays of sunlight filtered across the Downtown, our
little beach town returned to normal. But to those who were part of
that spirit of ’49 the memories still remain of the wild west days of
Huntington Beach.
What a time to have been alive.
* 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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