Summer celebration of 1924
JERRY PERSON
Over the years, our service organization and clubs members have
volunteered their time in helping out in many of our city’s events
and celebrations. From helping out during our many parades to helping
build the Scout cabin in Lake Park, our service clubs have played an
active roll in our community. When it came to planning civic events,
our Chamber of Commerce had no equal. And when it came to
coordinating these events the Lions Club excelled.
So in 1924 it was only natural for the city to turn to these
wonderful organizations for help in planning a huge summer
celebration to mark the opening of Coast Boulevard and Fifth Street.
The celebration would be run throughout the summer months and
would include music from our municipal band, vaudeville acts and a
wing walker. Two big weekend celebrations were planned.
This week we will look at two of these summer events and what took
place.
A committee was formed for the first event that included Charles
Patton, president of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce; R.J.
Prescott, grammar school trustee and Charles Boster, a city trustee.
These men were given the responsibility of planning the first of
many summer events to be held on Aug. 2 and 3, 1924.
Mayor Bill Ridenour selected 200 men from the Chamber of Commerce,
American Legion, Lions Club and the Realty Board to help the
committee with the event. This committee searched for something
special and found it in Auggy Pedlar, a famous wing walker of the
time, to give an exhibition of his skills.
Three years prior, Seal Beach had engaged Pedlar and although the
event was a huge success, the cost of $2,500 was a little too costly
for our city to the north. But as we know, nothing is too much when
it comes to showcasing our town to the outside world, even today.
Wing walkers were a popular form of entertainment after World War
I. They used those old slow flying biplanes used in the war and not a
fast jet of today.
J.L. Kelso and his brother S.R. Kelso would pilot the plane Pedlar
would be using in his act. There would be two shows each day, one in
the afternoon and a nighttime exhibition that also included a
fireworks show.
Huntington Beach Trustee W. R. Wharton was placed in charge of
supplying our beach visitors with free coffee. Wharton contacted
several big coffee importers in Los Angeles and as a result he
received donations of several hundred pounds of coffee for the event.
Pedlar was not the only act on the program. An exhibition of high
diving skills would be given at the pier by our very first lifeguard,
Harry Lee.
The day’s program included Pedlar’s hair-raising show, free
fishing off of our pier, surf swimming in our surf, more free coffee
and our visitors could enjoy an old time picnic on the beach before
the second part of the program began.
The Huntington Beach Municipal Band donated its services with a
fine concert which begun with the Distant Greeting March and
concluded with Lassus Trombone and the Stars and Stripes Forever.
The Brown Sisters showed off their talent on their accordions. The
Plantation Quartet, a four-man singing group proved popular with the
audience.
This was then followed by Pedlar’s night performance, which
included a great fireworks show.
James Morris, William Childs and Ted Tarbox were appointed by
Mayor Ridenour to oversee the celebration’s second weekend on Aug. 9
and 10.
This new committee engaged Pedlar for another weekend of wing
walking. Pedlar and the Kelso Brothers gave an even better
performance then they did the preceding weekend.
The evening’s vaudeville program included impersonations of
Abraham Lincoln, George Washington and other famous people.
A Scottish bagpiper was engaged to play several old-time Scottish
airs.
Nell Mitchell played her violin next for the audience, and when
she finished her performance, a two-man tumbling act delighted the
people with their gymnastic skills.
Two orchestras were engaged to play between the vaudeville acts.
Our municipal band was on hand with a different program of musical
delights and this concert ended with the Stars Spangled Banner.
All during those many weeks our service club volunteers gave of
themselves to their city and to its visitors on that summer of 1924.
* 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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