ROBERT GARDNER -- The verdict
Near the end of Coast Highway in Corona del Mar is a building that
looks like it should be in England -- little surprise since it is an
exact replica of the Hurley Bell, a famous English inn.
It was built by two very proper English ladies, Marguerite McCullock
and her mother, who planned it as their home but quickly realized the
commercial potential of the place and leased it to a series of fine
restaurant operators.
The first was Bruce Warren, a ham actor who, with another ham actor,
had run Tail of the Cock, a very successful restaurant in Los Angeles.
Warren attempted to duplicate his success in Corona del Mar, operating
the site as Tail of the Cock. He fared well until World War II did away
with any automobile traffic at night and he went out of business.
After the war, Fred Hershon ran the place as the Hurley Bell, and his
operation may have been the highlight of restaurant operations in Newport
Beach until the Ritz came along.
Under Hershon, nothing left the kitchen without undergoing a personal
inspection by his wife, Mildred.
One afternoon I was watching a high-stakes gin rummy game at the
Irvine Coast (now Newport Beach) Country Club. One of the players had a
phone call. He asked me to take his hand. I did, drew and ginned. The
losers pushed across the table more money than I had ever seen in one
place. The man who won pushed it all to me and told me to work out a
dinner for all the players and their wives and my wife and myself.
I went down to the Hurley Bell, showed Hershon the money and asked him
if he could put together a dinner for the crowd with that money. He said
he could. We had dinner at the restaurant, and the guests, who were a
fairly sophisticated group, said it was the best dinner they ever had.
There is a story that the Hurley Bell was a brothel, but that is pure
hogwash. It was a gambling joint. I know because when two maverick cops
raided the place and arrested the operators, I was the city judge at the
time.
I fined the operators the maximum and ordered their equipment
confiscated. I knew that was beyond my authority and that the order
probably would be set aside, but I did it just for the hell of it. Sure
enough, a Superior Court judge set it aside.
Such are the vagaries of age that I don’t remember who operated the
Hurley Bell after Hershon, but at some point it became the Five Crowns
and it has to be one of the most consistently successful restaurants
around.
I walk by it every Sunday and am amazed at the brunch crowd. And as
for Mother’s Day, the traffic generated is so heavy the restaurant has to
have its own traffic officer. I imagine the two ladies who built it would
be quite pleased.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column is published Tuesdays.
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