JERRY PERSON -- A LOOK BACK
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The year was 1939, and the World’s Fair was taking place on the
grassy fields of Flushing Meadows in New York.
On the West Coast, the San Francisco World’s Fair was drawing people
to Treasure Island (Yerba Buena Island) in the bay.
But while these two events were attracting hundreds of thousands of
visitors, an event much closer to home was captivating its own visitors.
It was in that year that our own Orange County celebrated its 50th
anniversary. And what better place to celebrate that special event than
in Huntington Beach?
A huge birthday party was planned and sponsored by the Orange County
Associated Chambers of Commerce on Aug. 29. The county’s Golden Jubilee
even brought the governor from Sacramento to help celebrate with
prominent Orange County residents at the Golden Bear Cafe on Pacific
Coast Highway.
Before the event, the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce’s secretary
and manager at the time, William Gallienne, sent out 500 invitations to
local notables and pioneer Orange County residents to come and celebrate
the Golden Jubilee.
A large two-tiered cake was ordered from Eader’s Bakery for the
occasion, with 49 candles around it and one large candle in the center. A
state delegation headed by Gov. Culbert Olson and Isadore Dockweiler of
the California State Parks Commission came to honor Orange County.
Around the Golden Bear’s banquet table sat many of Orange County’s
elite, including James Irvine II; Phil Stanton, founder of Seal Beach;
Fred Bixby of Long Beach; J.P. Greeley of Newport Beach; and Huntington
Beach Mayor Marcus M. McCallen.
Bill Little of California’s All-Year Club and Dockweiler spoke about
how Orange County separated from Los Angeles County in 1889 and also
related interesting tidbits about how Los Angeles County politicians
fought hard -- and sometimes dirty -- to keep the county as one.
Several Orange County supervisors and mayors came to help light the
candles on the Jubilee cake.
The Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce chose pioneer resident Mary
J. Newland as Woman of the Year. She had the honor of cutting the Jubilee
cake that evening.
When the Golden Bear was demolished, a requirement of the demolition
was that part of the Bear’s facade had to be saved and placed into the
new development. Parts of the old Bear were incorporated into the side of
Pierside Pavilion. But when the building owners remodeled a few months
ago, they removed all traces of the Bear’s existence.
When Main Street businessman Andy Arnold asked one of the workmen
there what had become of the Bear’s facade, the workman told Arnold “it
broke.”
But to those who attended that gala event of so long ago, those
memories of the Jubilee and of the Golden Bear remain as fresh as ever.
* 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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