Peering inn-side Huntington’s history
JERRY PERSON
This year, Huntington Beach will officially celebrate its 100th
birthday, and in those years the skyline has changed so much.
As some of you know, Huntington Beach had been called Pacific City
in 1901. A group of men comprising Phil Stan, William Newland, Col.
S.H. Finley, Judson House and C.F. Weatherbee formed a syndicate and
bought 40 acres of land and laid out a small resort town.
By 1903, the name had been changed when a post office was
established with the name of Huntington Beach on June 22, 1903. A
group of men from Los Angeles bought out Stanton’s syndicate and
called their syndicate the Huntington Beach Company.
The town was renamed for Henry Huntington, owner of the Pacific
Electric red car line. Huntington was persuaded to bring his
streetcar down into town and after buying a large block of stock in
the Huntington Beach Company, brought his line down and built a depot
too.
The reason for the red car was to bring rich Los Angeles men to
town and sell them lots for a summer resort. After the tracks were
completed into town, the first red car left Long Beach at 2 p.m. on
June 18, 1904, and regular service to Huntington Beach began on July
1, 1904.
But the city has come to recognize July 4, 1904 as its official
birthday. On that day, a huge, free barbecue was given along with a
parade as red cars pulled into the depot and travelers disembarked to
watch the parade and buy land. If buyers wanted to stay overnight,
that was a problem, as no large hotels were available.
In 1905, the Huntington Beach Company constructed a “grand” hotel
at the corner of Eighth Street and Ocean Avenue (804 Pacific Coast
Highway) and named it Hotel Huntington. But for most of its life,
people knew it as the Huntington Inn.
This fine hotel was built on five lots in the Craftsman style
popular at the time. The builders, Martin and Huber, spared no
expense in its design and when finished, it cost them $24,000.
The first floor of the 30-room hotel was constructed with a brick
facade and the upper stories of frame and shingle siding. The hotel
began operations in August 1905 and was run by D.A. Stokes and his
wife.
The hotel’s first manager, Clarence E. Willey, saw to its
day-to-day operations until 1909, when Roy Oliver took over.
On Feb. 17, 1909, the city incorporated, but before this event the
town’s civic leaders held many meeting inside the inn. It’s not a
simple matter to become a city, and many issues had to be resolved.
Oliver continued as manager until 1911, when Thomas Brainerd was
hired. Tom Talbert, Phil Stanton and several civic leaders from
Orange County’s beach towns met at the inn during March of 1912 to
form the South Coast Improvement Assn. to plan roads, public
utilities and other necessary improvements to the coastal communities
from Seal Beach to San Clemente.
In 1919, the association changed its name to the Orange Coast
Assn. and continued to meet and improve the lives of Orange County
residents. Through these early years, there were several owners of
the inn, and the most unusual was when the inn was purchased in 1917
by a colorful heavyweight boxer named Tommy Burns.
He wanted to create a health resort for his friends and changed
the dining menu to reflect this idea. After a while, he sold the inn
to a fellow prize fighter named “Philadelphia” Jack O’Brien and it
became a social gathering place for sports people.
When Lynn Colburn took over in 1920, it became the place for
social and civic meetings, and one way Colburn sought to bring people
into the dining room was to offer tickets for $12, which entitled
ticket holders to 24 meals. That’s only 50 cents a meal, and at the
inn these were full, sit-down meals with fine linens and no plastic
knifes or forks.
When the oil boom came in the early 1920s, Standard Oil took over
the inn for their employees’ living quarters. With the opening of the
coast highway, more people traveled to Huntington Beach, and the inn
was about the only fine hotel in the area.
As more modern hotels and motor courts were built in other coastal
cities, the inn suffered a decline. The depression in the 1930s
contributed to this decline. When Agnes O’Shea took over the inn
during World War II, she called it the Island View Inn.
But everyone just kept calling it the Huntington Inn, and in 1948,
the dining room had been remodeled and was run by C.R. Lyman. Up to
this time, the structure had changed little in outside appearance
since it was built in 1905.
In 1951, Frank Saputo added an addition at the rear of the
building that he called the Log Room Theater and the dining room he
renamed Casa de Ora. The Galvin family now owned the building and the
old inn was beginning to show her age.
In the mid-1950s, the Elks Lodge outgrew its meeting room and
began looking for larger quarters, and the inn looked just right. But
local lodges are prohibited from incurring indebtedness, so a group
of loyal Elks formed a nonprofit corporation called the Ocean Front
Corporation. These men included Joseph Bartoll, Roy Bryant, Ray
Dolan, Byron Fenley, Allen Gisler, S.K. Kowitt, Robert Marshall,
Gerhardt Strangeland and D.C. Terry.
They purchased the inn from the Galvin family in 1955 and it
became the Elks Lodge No. 1959 of Huntington Beach. For the next 10
years it was the social hub of Elkdom, but as they outgrew their
first location, the Elks outgrew this one too.
They sold the inn to Union Oil, who wanted to build a gas station
on the corner, and in December 1969 had the old inn torn down. But
the station was never built, and today a Quality Inn stands on that
hallow ground where once many a rich and important person stayed to
enjoy the view of our majestic blue ocean.
* 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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