Piers of yesteryear
June Casagrande
It was the 1930s. Newport Harbor High School had just been dedicated,
the biggest employer in town was the Western Canners Co., and the
city and the harbor were still young.
In a classic 1930s style, each of the city’s public docks was
adorned with finials -- decorative tops to the two posts at the end
of each pier. The blue finials, carved out of solid oak, were an
expression of style as well as a helpful reference for boaters who
needed to know whether the piers they were approaching were public or
private.
One by one, the finials succumbed to time and the elements -- dry
rot, general decay -- leaving the city’s 10 public piers without
their splash of yesteryear. But now, all that has changed.
The city has just completed a project to install the classic-style
finials on each of its municipal docks. The blue posts were made to
the exact specifications of the original 1930s designs, said Chris
Miller of the city’s Harbor Resources Division. The Harbor Commission
and the City Council voted to restore them last year. Using a
fiberglass mold of the original finials, the city has recreated the
exact look that adorned the bay in the finials’ heyday.
“The main reason is because they help boaters identify from the
water which docks are public,” Miller said.
Now there are two finials at the end of each of the city’s 10
public docks that are at the same time decorative, nostalgic and
utilitarian.
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