A Look Back
“I was walking along 81st Street near Central Avenue in Los Angeles
when I heard the news that Pearl Harbor was bombed,” said Huntington
Beach resident Don Autrey.
This week we’ll conclude looking at how Huntington Beach reacted on
Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941 and how it affected the lives of its citizens in the
days that followed the bombing.
The day after the bombing Mayor Marcus M. McCallen issued a
declaration of a state of emergency to its citizens, in which everyone
who owned a spare firearm was asked to bring it to the police station so
it could be loaned to another resident.
In the opening days of the war, 60 of our citizens enlisted in the
California State Guard Company “E” 2nd Battalion, Sixth Infantry,
Huntington Beach unit.
No one could say that the people of Huntington Beach weren’t
patriotic. These brave citizens enlisted at the Chamber of Commerce
office here, which remained open day and night.
Some of those who enlisted were Robert Ross, Marvin Renfro, Walter
Stacy, Bert Hardy, Bert Harding, Raymond Vidal and Cecil Boles.
Fire Chief Jack Sargent called a special meeting to appoint sector
wardens, who would take charge if the city were bombed by incendiary
bombs or hit by sabotage.
He divided the city into eight sectors with a chairman in each sector.
Cecil Wheat, the son of Harry and Elsie Bakre who owned the Golden
Bear Cafe, enlisted in the Navy.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation ordered our police to arrest our
Chili Pepper King, Masami Sasaki, and six other Japanese men. All were
taken to the Santa Ana jail.
Sasaki had operated the largest chili drying plant in the world right
here in Huntington Beach. It was where Albertson’s Market is today on
Beach Boulevard and Utica Avenue.
Sasaki had been a leader in the Japanese American community in
California and at one time entertained Japanese Prince Konoye and his
wife.
Huntington Beach resident Norm Morrison was setting pins in a bowling
alley above the Mecca Theatre in Los Angeles when he heard the news.
Warren Bristol of Bristol Service Station, went to Chicago to pick up
a new Studebaker and drive it home for a friend in Long Beach.
The Rev. Luther A. Arthur gave shooting lessons to many of our men and
women in case of an invasion.
The City Council ordered the Pav-a-lon auditorium next to the pier,
Memorial Hall and all other municipal buildings with nighttime events be
canceled.
Former Huntington Beach Mayor Don MacAllister, who was 9 at the time
and living with his family in the Westlake Park area of Los Angeles,
vividly recalls the blackouts the West Coast went through during those
days of the war.
Central Elementary School teacher Esther Funk had to postpone her talk
to the school’s Parent Teacher Assn.
Pacific Electric Agent Willis Osborn announced that a round trip
ticket to Los Angeles and back on the red car would be $1.10.
Jack Robertson’s men’s store window had a display of knitted garments
made by our local Red Cross ladies and men to be sent to the people of
England.
The Huntington Beach High School Band placed fifth in a
bandcompetition held in Long Beach and won a prize of $20.
Chamber of Commerce President Ralph Hawes offered the assistance of
all of its members to the city.
The city bought a 180-gallon air compressor for use in its air raid
warning siren.
In the days following, the city settled down for the Christmas
holiday.
It had landscaper and designer Dick Beeson erect the city’s Christmas
shrine in Lake Park.
Local Residents would portray Mary and Joseph and the three wise men
would be riding life-size camels.
Ocean Avenue, now Pacific Coast Highway, was a beehive of military
activity, what with armored vehicles speeding back and forth day and
night.
The community Christmas tree party was held inside the Pav-a-lon for
the children to keep their minds off the war.
But it didn’t take long for the news to reach Huntington Beach that
one of its former residents was killed at Pearl Harbor and with the news
brought the war a little closer to home.
Huntington’s George Tyler enlisted in the Navy in February 1941,
received his training at the San Diego Navy Base and was assigned aboard
the USS West Virginia.
The ship was at Pearl Harbor when the bombs dropped.
Tyler was only 18-years-old.
In the weeks that followed, residents scanned the heavens for enemy
aircraft and it would be a long time before Huntington Beach returned to
normal, if anyone could call Huntington Beach normal.
* 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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