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ROBERT GARDNER
When I was 8 and living in Green River, Wyo., my parents put me on
the train to visit my sister Jesse in Balboa, Calif. I rode by
myself, changing trains, which often meant traipsing through a
strange city to the right train station. Looking back, it was a
challenging trip for an 8-year-old, but I made it safely, arriving
one afternoon at a place I thought I was visiting, but which became
my home for most of my life.
I no longer remember my first view of the ocean, but it took me
virtually no time to get used to my new town. Charley Plummer taught
me to swim. In those days, that meant the breaststroke, which was
probably a good thing, since everybody’s toilet flushed into the bay,
and you wanted to be able to see what was floating in the water in
front of you.
My brother-in-law Dick Whitson ran the Green Dragon, and soon I
was earning 10 cents an hour chipping ice for lime rickeys and other
soft drinks.
My folks moved to Maywood, and I went to live with them for
awhile, but it was a rough area, and before long I was back in Balboa
with Jesse and Dick. I learned to bodysurf at the Balboa Pier with my
friends Tagg Atwood, Spinney Richardson and Marco Anich, and
eventually we got into skin diving when Marco brought back the idea
of face plates from Hawaii. We’d scrape abalone off the rocks, cut
them into steaks and pound them for hours with a milk bottle -- then
bread them, fry them and have a feast, never thinking that some day
such a meal would be a rare and expensive thing.
Even when I was in college, Balboa was my home. I came down every
summer, spending my days at the beach and working nights at the
Rendezvous Ballroom. These were the days of Prohibition, when the rum
runners pulled up at city docks; the Drugless Drugstore provided
straight alcohol; and gambling was a major business. Balboa was “Sin
City,” which made it a popular place.
Of course, there were always party poopers, who wanted to clean
things up, and every so often they’d pressure the sheriff to do
something, and he’d come to town. Long before he arrived, we’d get
word he was coming, and everything was tidied up for his appearance.
He’d saunter through town, find nothing and go back and report that
everything was clean in Balboa, and as soon as he left, everyone went
back to having fun.
As can be imagined, city government was not the pristine operation
it is today, a fact I knew from personal experience.
Dick Whitson was city clerk for awhile, and my other
brother-in-law, Roland Hodgkinson, was chief of police until the feds
tried to bust him for income tax evasion, a polite way of saying
graft. He stepped down, although he was eventually exonerated by the
courts, largely on the testimony of my sister Marian, who looked the
perfect lady in her white gloves and was probably the biggest liar I
ever met.
I have seen amazing changes in the 80-plus years I’ve lived here.
Balboa was a place that came to life in the summer, when the
tourists came, and then slumbered all winter after their departure.
Newport was home to a fishing fleet. The fishing fleet has
disappeared; the mudflats of the bay have become a harbor crammed
with boats; and the town is busy summer, winter and every day in
between.
Cattle no longer graze the hills of the Irvine Ranch; toilets no
longer empty directly into the bay and ocean; and the city is run by
respected professionals and an upright council.
Corona del Mar, where I’ve lived since 1947, has gone from a place
with lots of vacant lots and dirt alleys to an area crammed with
expensive homes.
I’ve told some of these stories over the years. I hope you enjoyed
reading about them as much as I enjoyed living them.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
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