A Look Back -- Jerry Person
Jerry Person
I have often spoken of the Pav-a-lon at the entrance to the Huntington
Beach Pier, but how many of you can remember when it was called by its
original name?
Just prior to its grand opening in 1938, this magnificent beachfront
structure was being referred to by several different names -- Casino
Huntington, Pavilion Huntington or as most residents simply referred to
it as the “pavilion.”
This beachfront city showpiece was described by then Councilman Lee
Chamness as “. . . one of the most important links in the development of
this city as a popular and permanent resort center.”
Does that description sound familiar today?
Built as a Public Works Administration project during the President
Franklin Roosevelt administration, this project would help by giving work
to people during the great depression years. The $70,000 beach edifice
was only a part of the city’s grand design for its beachfront area. The
pavilion and city auditorium would showcase many of the area’s popular
bands over its lifetime as well as many national big bands of that era.
The building’s general contractors, Brunzell & Jacobson, oversaw much
of the early construction and was responsible for seeing that the work
was on schedule.
The superintendent, Louis P. Ronneberg, worked closely with the
project’s engineer Ervin Smith to hire the many subcontractors. These
subs included plumbing by Hickman Brothers of Long Beach, heating by the
J. Herman Company of Los Angeles and cement work by the Graham Brothers
of Los Angeles.
The steel framework came from Trojan Steel of Los Angeles and the
sheet metal work was dome by the MacCloskey Sheet Metal Works of Long
Beach.
The electrical work was done by Shamel Electric of Los Angeles and the
lumber was supplied not by our local lumber company, but from the L.D.
Reeder Company of Los Angeles.
The wood floors that would hold many of our young jitterbug dancers
came from the Long Beach Flooring Co. and the iron work came not from
Huntington Beach, but from the South Gate Iron Works of Huntington Park.
Even the painting of the new pavilion came from outside Huntington
Beach by the George K. Morgan Co. in Los Angeles.
Lathing and Plastering were done by Joseph Young of So. Figueroa in
Los Angeles and all of the beautiful finished hardware came from the
Builders Hardware and Supply Co. of Los Angeles.
It would have been nice if these subcontractors had come fromthe
Huntington Beach area.
From the start there were problems and changes were made to the
original plans.
The city’s building committee wanted the upper floor raised by six
inches and the location moved 24 feet south of the pier, and to add a
retaining wall for an addition expense of $5,400.
A state-of-the-art sound system would be installed inside the new
pavilion.
Even the businesses around were doing their part to add to
thebeautification of our beachfront.
Harry Bakre added a $5,000 French Provincial style cocktail lounge to
his Golden Bear Cafe as well as hiring Joe Noble, an ex-soldier of
fortune to manage his cafe.
Two more cafes located across from the pavilion were added to
complement the new structure.
These were the Silver Moon cafe and the Kohler-Shehan cafe in the 400
block of Pacific Coast Highway.
Even something as simple as the Standard Oil Company’s service station
at the entrance to the pier was given a sprucing up. The concession
stands next to the pavilion did their part too. Helen Darst renamed her
stand the Swing Inn from the Stop Inn. She was aided by her three
daughters -- Marge, Bonnie and Jacqueline in running the hot dog and
hamburger concession stand on the strand.
A bungalow court (small single apartments) were being built on 5th
Street by Bertha Harris in anticipation of new tourists that the pavilion
would bring to our city.
This new dance pavilion would really put Huntington Beach on the
resort maps and so the whole town was looking forward to the big three
day event.
The grand opening of the pavilion was set for May 28, 1938 and next
week we’ll look back at that big event.
* 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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