Better days for the ‘Queen of the Pier’
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JERRY PERSON
Can you imagine for just a moment what a lady who had spent more than
half of her 74 years working would feel if she lost her business of
37 years and most of her dearest friends within an hour?
This is just what happened to one of our legends of Huntington
Beach.
A while back, I received a letter from Huntington Beach resident
Donald Sinex in which he recalled coming here from his home in
Alhambra as a child in the 1940s to swim in our salt-water plunge.
Sinex remembers the buildings that sat on our old pier, Neptune’s
Locker and the Captain’s Galley, and the grand lady who ran them.
This week we’ll look back at the lady, Ella Christensen, who is
fondly remembered as the “Queen of the Pier.”
Ella had not always been a resident of our city, but to so many
generations of Huntington Beach citizens, she was an icon of our
pier.
It was in 1914 that our new concrete pier opened and also the same
year that Ella first opened her eyes to a new world.
When Ella grew up she married Carl Christensen, and the two took
up farming. Along the way, two children, Joy and Carl Jr., were born.
But farm life was taking its toll on Carl’s health and the local
doctors advised him that if he kept at farming, it would eventually
kill him.
So in 1951, the family left its farm in Akron, Colo., and headed
west for California. The family arrived that year and took up
residence in our city, making their home at 633 Hartford Ave.
At this time, Port L. Woods and his wife Genevieve of 214 3rd St.
owned the bait stand on the pier.
Ella and Carl were able to purchase this bait and tackle
concession stand from the Woodses on April 21, 1951 for $2,500. Their
new business became known as Carl’s Bait & Tackle Shop. In 1971, Carl
and Ella purchased another concession on the pier and opened
Neptune’s Locker, a sandwich counter and pub.
Everything looked rosy for Carl and Ella, but Carl passed away in
1972, leaving Ella to carry on with the business. In 1975, Ella
acquired the adjacent concession, the Captain’s Galley, across from
Neptune’s Locker. Carl’s Bait Shop was renamed the Tackle Box and
became the place for fishermen to get their fishing tackle.
Huntington Beach resident Willy Beyer spent many hours fishing off
our pier and checking what was new at the Tackle Box. He also watched
the sun set while seated on one of Ella’s 17 red vinyl-topped chairs
in Neptune’s Locker.
Many a high school student would earn extra money working for Ella
during the summer.
Over the years, many of our lifeguards got to know this 5-foot
lady, and so did their children. Ella would watch for any lifesaving
emergencies when the lifeguard tower was closed.
There was one time when two intoxicated guys jumped off the pier
into the cold water. Ella was right on the phone calling Marine
Safety Officer Mark Panis. As one of the two guys struggled for
shore, the other one had to be rescued by an ex-junior lifeguard when
Panis arrived to render first aid. Those two men owe their lives to
the fast actions of this little lady.
In 1983, Ella’s luck continued when the big storm damaged fellow
pier business owner John Gustafson’s End Cafe.
But the good luck couldn’t continue forever.
It was in the late morning of July 12, 1988 that Ella received a
phone call from a local newspaper reporter wanting to know what she
thought of the city closing the pier.
This had been the first time she heard that the city was closing
the historic pier. City Administrator Paul Cook and his staff had
decided to withhold the news from Ella. To tell her any earlier would
have created a rush out to Ella’s for one last beer and this would
create a dangerous situation, Cook said.
I think that they withheld the news because if her customers or
the lifeguards found out, they would have hung those officials up by
their thumbs.
“City officials” told Ella that when the pier reopened, they could
not offer her any guarantees or first options to operate pier
concessions on the new pier.
So much for city loyalty to Ella after so many years of dedicated
work by her to our city. This broke Ella’s heart.
The two buildings at the head of the pier were moved off the pier
and stored at the Public Works Yard to be used at a later date, or
that is what the city told the preservation community at the time.
But those promises were never kept and later the buildings were
destroyed.
Like those two buildings that are no longer with us, neither is
Ella.
In Sinex’s letter he wrote, “Sure it was a little tacky with
telephone-pole stools, but it had great sunset views and cheap
happy-hour shrimp cocktails.”
For many of us who knew her, she will always remain the “Queen of
the Pier.”
* 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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