An honor for an islander
June Casagrande
There was a time when houses were hauled to Balboa Island by barge.
There was a time when an island resident built a bridge to the water
using an old mast shipped in from the San Pedro shipyards. And there
was a time when a cluster of young women lined up on the sand in
their latest 1922 swim fashions for the island’s Bathing Beauty
Contest.
Those times are gone, but thanks to Jim Jennings, they will never
be forgotten. Just weeks after his local history book “Old Balboa
Island Stories: From 1907 to the Millennium” was met with huge and
unexpected initial success, Jennings received a proclamation from
Mayor Steve Bromberg for his contribution to the unique nautical
history of the island.
“It’s an honor to give a proclamation to this man,” Bromberg
announced at Tuesday’s City Council meeting.
Bromberg also lauded the longtime island resident for his own role
in history. Jennings owned the Balboa Island Union 76 station from
1959 to 1989, where he was known as a scrupulously honest car
repairman who was also devoted to helping out neighbors any way he
could.
“Everything I did to help others I did for myself because I really
enjoy it,” Jennings said, thanking the mayor, council members and
neighbors for the honor.
The many nautical photos and stories Jennings collected over the
years have been donated to the Balboa Island Historical Society and
Museum. And of course many appear in his book, including images of
the Balboa Island Ferry in 1919 before it carried cars, a biplane
flown by Glen Martin into Newport Bay, and of course, the
well-concealed bathing beauties.
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