Before there was a city, there was Stark’s
The next time the city of Newport Beach feels a compulsion to
install one of those bronze historical markers, I suggest it give
serious consideration to Stark’s Saloon. Given the personality of our
town, historical recognition of a pioneer saloon would not seem
inappropriate.
It would be at least as appropriate as the plaque honoring Glenn
Martin’s hydroplane flight from Balboa Bay to Avalon and back in
1912. While that was a memorable event, to me the most newsworthy
aspect of Martin’s feat was the speech made by the German mayor of
Santa Ana, who observed that he had “flown der vater offer chust like
a lion.”
Henry Stark opened his saloon in 1902 on that funny little
half-block street in Newport called 21st Place. The site was later
occupied by Sid’s Blue Beet.
It may seem odd that a saloon was opened in 1902, when the city
was not even incorporated until 1906. However, it must be remembered
that McFadden’s Wharf was erected in 1899, and by 1902, Newport was
practically a bustling metropolis, complete with a commercial wharf
and a railway to Santa Ana, not to mention the beginnings of a
fishing fleet. Given the many thirsty men (women were not allowed in
saloons), it is not surprising that Newport had a saloon.
During Prohibition, Stark’s lost its identity as a saloon.
Nevertheless, the place remained open as a cafe, and I am told that
Henry Stark treated Prohibition with the same lofty disdain as did
Balboa with its justly famous Drugless Drugstore, where you couldn’t
buy as much as an aspirin tablet, but straight alcohol was for sale
across the counter at two-bits an ounce.
However, before, during and after Prohibition, Stark’s boasted
several items of historical interest. The first was the longest
running poker game in Newport Beach or probably anywhere else.
Separated from the bar by a thin wall, that poker game went on for 24
hours at a stretch.
When the bar closed at 2 a.m., to re-open at 6 a.m., the poker
players just closed the door between the bar and the room housing the
poker game and kept playing. The game started shortly after Henry
Stark opened the place and ran until the Stark family sold it to Sid
Soffer in 1960. That’s a long time for any game to run.
Also of historical interest was Stark’s price list. For 15 cents
you could get a straight shot with either a beer, Coke or ginger ale
chaser. Obviously, for a buck you could buy drinks for the house. An
added bonus was that the bartender bought every third drink. At least
he did when Al Horvath, Bert Oquist or Shorty Charle were the
bartenders. It’s hard to find drinks in that price range today.
Another item that deserves mention in any in-depth historical
discussion was the old gal they called Dollar Dolly, an older woman
who trolled for customers at Stark’s. I have no idea how old Dolly
was, but she was no spring chicken. She had shiny, dyed black hair
and pancake makeup so thick it looked like it was made from real
pancake dough. Two red-rimmed eyes peered out at the world from about
a pound of mascara. I don’t know how she ever got a customer.
I won’t go so far as to suggest that there should be a bronze
plaque honoring Dollar Dolly as a historical monument, but I
certainly think Stark’s deserves some recognition.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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