Making Surf City a whistle stop
JERRY PERSON
Throughout our hundred-plus years of history, we have welcomed many
important citizens to our city. There have been several well-known
politicians who have stopped to say a few words to our residents, or
have ventured through our community.
There have been presidents, vice-presidents and governors who have
enjoyed our beautiful city, and this week we’ll look at four of these
individuals.
Our first important figure may have stopped and dined with one of
our early families.
Many years ago, I was talking to Ruth Robertson, the wife of Main
Street clothing storeowner Jack Robertson, and she related this
story, which I have not been able to substantiate yet. Ruth told me
that when she was a very little girl, her parents had dinner with the
Newland family at their home on the hill.
She told me that one of the guests at that dinner was the 26th
president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. Since the Newland
house is much older then-Pacific City (1901) and Huntington Beach
(late 1903), the story could be true -- Roosevelt was in California
around that time in Yosemite.
When Arnold Schwarzenegger launched his campaign for governor of
California, he chose Huntington Beach as his kickoff site. A huge
crowd of both media and local people stood on the sidewalk in front
of the Inka Grill in the third block of Main Street.
Finally, after a long wait, he entered the restaurant and spoke to
several members of our business community, including Steve Bone of
the Waterfront Hilton. Schwarzenegger stepped out onto the sidewalk
and was mobbed by a sea of people. He walked along Main Street to
Jack’s Surfboards and across to Huntington Surf & Sport and back up
Main Street.
He ended his visit to our town at the fountain in front of the
city’s parking structure.
It was Richard Nixon, a young congressman who pulled into town in
his station wagon on April 28, 1950. Nixon was traveling through
Orange County, with his wife Pat, as a candidate for the U.S. Senate.
Nixon stopped his car at the corner of Main Street and Walnut Avenue
to address more than 200 people in a 15-minute talk.
We waited for Ted Bartlett, president of the Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce, to introduce him to the public. Climbing up on
the back of his station wagon’s tailgate, Nixon, with hand mike in
one hand, he spoke on two important issues of the day. One issue was
the unnecessary governmental expenditures and the other issue was
communistic infiltration in Washington.
While speaking about the hidden government taxes that support the
bureaucratic monstrosity now sloshing greedily about, his wife Pat
passed out useful thimbles to the ladies.
I’m not sure how our next story got started about our 32nd
president riding in our Fourth of July parade in 1938 and I am sorry
to say it just didn’t happen.
What took place happened 12 days after our parade when President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was in our state campaigning for Senator
William Gibbs McAdoo. It was on July 16, 1938 that President
Roosevelt’s motorcade left Los Angeles for San Diego to dedicate San
Diego’s new civic center building.
He would make three stops in Orange County, but I am sorry to say
that Huntington Beach was not one of these. The towns FDR stopped in
were Seal Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente.
His caravan did travel slowly along Ocean Avenue (PCH) from one
city limit to the other. Huge crowds lined the sidewalks, jammed roof
tops and stood in second story windows and anywhere else they could
find to see the president. Several hundred kids climbed onto the roof
of the Pacific Electric depot at the pier entrance for a good view.
The steel arch across Main Street and Ocean Avenue had been
decorated 50 feet high with California flowers, and there were flags
flying all over town in his honor.
When Roosevelt’s car entered our city, a great roaring welcome was
heard and this would continue all along the three miles of our city
limits. Many of our patriotic organizations turned out in uniform to
greet our chief executive.
There have been many other notable people who have stopped in our
town, and I am sure that many more will follow, just for the thrill
of shaking hands with someone from Surf City, USA.
* 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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