Waves of Time
Ellen McCarty
Editor’s note
As we drive busy freeways and boulevards past clusters of houses and
bustling shopping centers in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, we may
forget, or may not even realize, that the land has worn different faces
-- from sandy mesas and boggy peat marshes to railroad lines and oil
rigs.
Each week, as we approach the year 2000, the Independent will recount a
bit of local history. Much of the information for this series has been
taken from the book, “Huntington Beach, the Gem of the South Coast,”
written by Diann Marsh, in cooperation with the Huntington Beach
Historical Society. As we reach the end of the 1900s, we glance back
along the road that has been traveled by the places we call home.
When the pioneer Newland family built their home on the edge of a mesa in
1898, they didn’t have any neighbors.
Their lone Victorian house sat above the marshy peat lowlands, now
Fountain Valley, which William Newland drained during the next 10 years
and converted to farmland for celery, sugar beets, lima beans and chili
peppers. Originally considered worthless, the peat lands were later
declared the richest soil in the world.
The Newland farm was a mile from the ocean and there were no roads
connecting his farm to Newport Beach. Goods had to be transported in
horse-drawn wagons. Because there was no local hotel, the Newlands also
housed many guests over the years, mostly relatives from Illinois, but
also P.T. Barnum when the circus came to Santa Ana, and Henry Huntington,
who with Newland’s help, founded Pacific City in 1901. Huntington hoped
the city would become a village of summer beach homes that would rival
Atlantic City in the east.
Newland’s contributions to the town included advising the development of
the public school system, the First National Bank and several newspapers.
He also convinced Huntington to bring the Pacific Electric “Red Car”
Railway to town.
On July 4, 1904, a crowd of 50,000 gathered to watch the first daily
electric car service between Huntington Beach and Los Angeles. The day
was heralded as Founders Day and ever since that time, the city has had a
special knack for Fourth of July celebrations.
All around, houses soon sprang up, and the city’s name was changed in
Huntington’s honor.
Farmland, more than beach homes, was the city’s biggest draw.
The Bolsa Ditch was constructed in 1890 and, with other smaller drainage
systems, turned thousands of acres of worthless land north and east of
Huntington Beach into some of the most productive soil in Southern
California.
The celery industry became famous throughout the nation. But by 1910, the
sugar beet was rapidly replacing celery as the most important crop.
Another attraction was the city’s wildfowl. Hunters from across the state
would come to the Bolsa Chica to see and partake of “birds by the
thousands so thick in flight as to almost eclipse the sun,” said Tom
Talbert, an early Fountain Valley resident. The population grew, and by
1909, totaled 915 residents in a 3.7-square-mile area.
That year, 94 residents voted for incorporation as a sixth class city and
Ed Manning became the first mayor. The city was settling into its
identity as a quaint coastal community with successful school, police,
fire and postal services, but big changes were around the corner.
On May 24, 1920, Standard Oil Co. of California began pumping 45 barrels
of oil from its Huntington Beach well, an event that forever transformed
the face of Huntington Beach from quiet farmland into a booming spread of
wooden oil derricks that triggered a rush for black gold.
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