JERRY PERSON -- A LOOK BACK
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I see by the calendar that winter officially begins today and with
winter brings our holiday season and the conclusion to last week’s column
of how Christmas was celebrated in Huntington Beach in 1929.
Last week, we saw how our business community went about celebrating
the Christmas season and now we will learn what the rest of the town did
to celebrate the holidays.
Knowing how hard our police force works during the year, Police Chief
C.D. Stewart andhis wife threw a Christmas banquet at the Golden Bear for
the entire force and their families. Stewart planned the banquet as a
token of his appreciation for their loyalty and faithful service to the
city during the year.
In 1906, Ruth Dinsmore opened the Hotel Evangeline, now known as the
Colonial Inn Youth Hostel, on 8th Street. For Christmas 1929, Dinsmore
decided to retire and give the three-story hotel to her daughters Marge
and Viroka as a Christmas present.
In years past, it was considered proper for a city to have some type
of Christmas display, and that year, Huntington Beach called on its
volunteer firefighters to help plan the celebration. The local
Parent-Teacher Assn., the American Red Cross and the Women’s Club worked
along side the firemen to see to it that nobody in Huntington Beach would
be uncared for that Christmas. The firemen’s goal that year was to see to
it that nobody in Huntington Beach would go without a warm Christmas
dinner or some other creature comfort.
A large community Christmas tree was erected on a part of the old
civic center where the Main Street Library is today. The city called on
Santa to hand out gifts to the children and help with a short Christmas
program.
And what would Christmas be without a program in one of our churches.
Here in Huntington Beach, the churches worked extra hard to bring
Christ’s message to their congregations. The parishioners at Sts. Simon &
Jude Catholic Church had spent weeks practicing for their Feast of the
Nativity program.
This was celebrated at its midnight Mass on Christmas Eve. A
children’s Christmas program was held for Women’s Club members kids on
10th Street, and included a Christmas tree, gifts for the children and a
message from the Rev. John Condon.
In the Methodist church, the Rev. John Barnhart opened its program
followed by a SundaySchool program from the various classes. The class of
Pauline Prescott recited the Christmas story from the Bible and Mrs.
Lorenson’s class presented a “Holy City” pageant. But the high point of
the program for the kids came when Santa himself called down through an
opening in the church’s attic that he had arrived with gifts for those
who were good little boys and girls.
The Christian church was not to be outdone and held an evening
Christmas service cantata called The Light Eternal. Lawrence E. Worthy
led the church choir with Mrs. Hurst, the pastor’s wife, on the piano.
Worthy and his brother, Conrad Worthy, sang “The Message,” while soprano
Grace Dalany sang “Born in a Manger.”
Our Baptist church’s Christmas cantata, “His Natal Day,” was first
performed this year. Pastor Luther Arthur gave the reading after which
the choir performed “Ring the Bells of Christmas” and “O, Little Town of
Bethlehem” and ending the service by Arthur giving the benediction.
We’ll conclude this week’s column with a wish that nobody in ol’
Huntington Beach will be hungry or in need just as those fireman had
wished for back on Christmas of 1929.
* 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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