The two Huntingtons
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A LOOK BACK
Last month, I had the honor of attending not one, but two Huntington
high school alumni picnics in a single weekend.
When I stopped at Lake Park at 11 a.m. that Sunday, there were
already more than 100 people there, and more were still coming. And
who should I first run into? None other then Ann Minnie and Arline
Howard.
Little did these two ladies know that I had been sent on a spy
mission to the picnic.
You see, the day before I had attended another Huntington alumni
picnic at El Dorado Park in Long Beach. This picnic was for students
who attended Huntington Park High School. My orders were to penetrate
the Huntington Beach High picnic and find out how they could get so
many former students to attend their reunion picnic.
Volunteers such as Minnie and Howard were equally matched by
Huntington Park’s Glen Powers, Sheila Kasparian Tierney and Gary
Moffett and their fellow Spartans.
So I thought this week, we would look at some of the history that
binds Huntington Beach and Huntington Park together. The first is, of
course, a similarity in names.
In 1901, William Newland, Phil Stanton, and General Finley laid
out 40 acres of land and called it Pacific City. Also in 1901, A.L.
Burbank and E.V. Baker laid out 100 acres of land and called it
Sunrise Track, and later, L.A. Park.
Both groups enlisted Henry Huntington to bring his Pacific
Electric Red Car into town and both groups renamed their towns after
Huntington.
For many years, Huntington Beach was just over three square miles,
and so was Huntington Park.
It was in a small room above Smith’s Grocery at 121 Main St. in
Huntington Beach that a small group of residents gathered in June
1904 to form a church in town. The church that they organized was the
First United Methodist Church of Huntington Beach.
Thirty miles to the north, a group of 12 residents were gathered
in a one-room schoolhouse to organize their church to be called the
First United Methodist Church of Huntington Park.
That same year, a small number of folks in Huntington Beach
organized the First Baptist Church in a makeshift building at 6th
Street and Orange Avenue. That makeshift building was torn down in
1905 and was replaced with a new building that was completed and
dedicated on May 10, 1906. The building still stands.
About this time, the folks in Huntington Park were organizing
their First Baptist Church. I came across a newspaper clipping of the
church in Huntington Park, and the two look so much alike.
Huntington Beach was incorporated as a city on Feb. 17, 1909, with
Ed Manning as its first mayor. The city to the north was incorporated
three years earlier, on Sept. 1, 1906, with A.A. Weber as its first
mayor.
When Huntington Beach began, our business streets were Main Street
and Ocean Avenue. The main business thoroughfare for Huntington Park
is Pacific Boulevard. So together, we had the “Pacific” “Ocean,” get
it?
Just after both towns were formed, each had its own local
newspaper -- the Huntington Beach News and the Huntington Park
Signal.
Football was all the rage in 1925. A man named “Cap” Sheue came to
Huntington Beach High to begin a legendary career. About that same
time over at Huntington Park High, the legendary athletic coach “Pop”
Squire began his career.
The old guy in the red suit with white fur trim ushered in the
Christmas holiday in Huntington Beach with a Santa Claus parade down
Main Street, and then did the same along Pacific Boulevard in the
city to the north.
When the big quake occurred on March 10, 1933, both cities
suffered greatly, and several of the buildings were reduced to
rubble.
Both towns, in the early years, needed the guidance of a Woman’s
Club to set the city’s course for the future -- for the beach town in
1908 and in 1906 in Huntington Park.
In 1904, J.B. Corbett became the first president of the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce. Huntington Park’s chamber can trace its
history back to the same year, when they formed the Huntington Park
Improvement Assn. Bet they never had anyone as great as our own
William Gallienne.
Both towns boasted an Elks Lodge, a Rotary Club, etc.
When I attended Huntington Park High, my principal was Noble
Waite, and when I came to Huntington Beach, who should I find running
the town’s drug store but his son, Noble Waite.
One of the more popular businesses in Huntington Beach for
tourists and residents is the Sugar Shack Cafe. Believe it or not,
there was a Sugar Shack on Florence Avenue just west of Pacific
Boulevard in the 1970s.
These are just a few historical similarities that the two cities
of Huntington share together in our golden past. About my first
spying mission at Lake Park, the ladies of Huntington Beach High
bribed me to forget what I had learned with a big In N Out hamburger.
After a couple bites of the bribe, I forgot everything.
* 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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