Recalling the Easter happenings of 1958
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JERRY PERSON
Easter is a joyous time to be with family and loved ones, and at this
time in Huntington Beach, many residents are planning their holiday
feast and readying for church-sponsored events such as sunrise
services and Easter egg hunts for the kids.
But for longtime Huntington Beach resident Virgil Proctor, it’s
going to be an especially lonely Easter holiday. Marian, his wife of
64 years, passed away in February of this year. I have known both for
many years, and whenever I would see Virg, there was Marian at his
side. Marian’s history reaches way back in our town.
Her father was well-known Realtor Carlos Reeves, Sr., and her two
sisters, Gwendolyn Talbert and Vivian Lance, were very prominent
Huntington Beach residents in their own right. It is sad that life is
but a brief flicker in the span of time, but Marian’s mark will be
felt until the end of time, for love is the memory time cannot kill.
This week we’ll look at what our town was doing at Easter during a
happier time.
I was just entering my high school in 1958, and in Huntington
Beach our churches and businesses were looking forward to the holiday
week. At Bray’s Food Center at 218 Main St., shoppers were treated
with bargains such as a Wilson, 5-pound canned ham for that holiday
table for only $4.98.
Accompanying the ham, you could add to your shopping basket a
pound of fresh carrots for 6 cents, apples for a fruit salad at two
pounds for 29 cents, fresh local grown asparagus at 19 cents a pound,
and to finish off the meal with a nice dessert, a frozen apple or
cherry pie could be had at 49 cents each. Over at Don’s Finer Meats
at 324 Main St., you could add to the holiday feast of a fresh ham at
69 cents a pound or a turkey to roast at 49 cents a pound, as butcher
Don Minnie offered these Easter specials to his customers.
If you didn’t feel like cooking Easter dinner for the family, you
could bring them over for a nice T-Bone dinner at Grace’s Cafe at 104
Main St. for just $1.75 or have ham and eggs for 90 cents.
Across the street from Grace’s Cafe, Ray and John Dolan were
serving a top sirloin steak dinner at their 107 Cafe at 107 Main St.
For only $1.75 you got the steak, soup, salad, baked potato, rolls,
butter and coffee. Today, that amount wouldn’t even buy you a gallon
of gas to drive over to the cafe.
At Sam’s Seafood, owners Nick, Ruth and Dick Katsaris had prepared
special Easter dinners of ham, turkey, duck, chicken, steak, lobster
or swordfish, and while Jimmy Means entertained Mom and Dad on the
cafe’s Hammond organ, the kids were given gifts of popcorn bunnies,
Easter eggs and other goodies.
Meanwhile, the ladies of the VFW Auxiliary were doing their part
for the holiday by preparing plans for their installation services
presided over by Alice McBeath, with refreshments for the
installation to be provided by Alice Hermann. This Easter marked the
first time that the Huntington Beach Junior Women selected a “Woman
of the Year,” and this honor went to Theresa Hanyak. It was planned
that she would ride in our Fourth of July parade of 1958.
What would Easter be for the kids if there were no Easter egg
hunts? The Windsor Club of Huntington Beach hid 250 pounds of Easter
eggs in Circle Park (Farquhar Park) and it was arranged that Paul
Doutt, Dante Siracusa, Roy Bryant, Ray and John Dolan, Michael
Nichols, Maurice Young, Ralph Riggs and Louis Betschart would lend a
helping hand to hide all those eggs for Mr. Bunny.
In the afternoon, the First Church of Christ (First Christian
Church) also held an Easter egg hunt for their kids under 5 years of
age. Helping hide those eggs, Mr. Bunny enlisted the aid of Bob
Laverne, Pat Bitter, Bonnie Bushard, Darlene Wells, Julia Megil, Jim
Whittington and Richard Wort.
That evening, the church’s choir presented a candlelight concert
in the church at 1207 Main St. The Rev. Lyman Ellis of the
Wintersburg Community Methodist Church had a special breakfast for
his congregation of pancakes, waffles and eggs to be served in Moore
Hall behind the church at Gothard Street and Warner Avenue.
After breakfast, the congregation would assemble in the church for
a special Easter music service, with Ellis delivering his Easter
message of “This is Your Life.”
Over in the church at Sixth Street and Orange Avenue, the members
of the congregation of the First Baptist Church were preparing an
evening cantata entitled “Memories of Easter Morn,” and this music
cantata was under the direction of Eber Flaws.
The church held an Easter morning service, in which the Rev.
Lowell Spangler delivered his message of “The Risen Christ and What
He Means to You.” The youth of the Baptist church, along with
Spangler, traveled north to Los Angeles to brighten the spirits of
those folks living at the Hollenbeck Home for the aged. Accompanying
Spangler on his mission of love were Linda Fleming, Paula Crow, Karen
Olsen, Jerry Millet, Donna Fleming, Melvyn Locke, Mickey Bratt and
Wally Jones.
In 1958, the area ministers held an Easter sunrise service at the
open-air bowl south of the pier at the foot of Third Street. So for
this Easter holiday, try to eat wisely, for as the saying goes, “Eat
today, for tomorrow we diet.”
* 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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