Manhattan Beach Chronicles
By Jan Dennis
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About this ebook
Jan Dennis
A former Manhattan Beach city councilwoman and mayor, Jan Dennis has written or compiled six previous books about her beloved seaside city. A former city commissioner, she has been deeply involved in civic organizations and events for more than four decades.
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Manhattan Beach Chronicles - Jan Dennis
volume.
Introduction
Throughout this volume we will introduce several of the elements that make Manhattan Beach, California, one of the much desired and tranquil residential addresses in the Los Angeles area.
Sixteen miles from what is now Manhattan Beach lies the city of Los Angeles, founded in 1781. However, not until the Santa Fe Railroad laid tracks passing through this area in 1888 would there be real interest in developing the virtues of these four square miles. Potential settlers were drawn to the South Bay area through brochures published by development firms such as the Redondo Beach and Centinela-Inglewood Land Companies.
Originally, the land on which today’s city is located was a broad series of sand dunes on an elevated shoreline that stretched from Playa del Rey to Redondo Beach. Over the years, the topography of the sand dunes has changed.
Transportation routes in the late 1800s were sparse, especially in the undeveloped area of Manhattan Beach. In 1897, the Potencia Townsite Company purchased the Manhattan Beach waterfront, which was slowly becoming the downtown site. A few years later, in 1901, John Shirley Ward, president of the company, arranged for a siding on the Santa Fe rail line, providing a landing for supplies, machinery and equipment brought in for the construction of the first pier.
This was followed by the Pacific Electric Railway, known as the Red Car,
in 1903. With better transportation, people could live near the shore yet work in Los Angeles or other areas in the L.A. Basin. It would not be until after World War II, with returning GIs and an increase in the aircraft and space industries, that dramatic increases occurred in the community’s population and development and housing patterns that are reflected today.
The neighborhoods of Manhattan Beach are seen here. Note the Manhattan Beach Pier at the end of Manhattan Beach Boulevard.
The clear skies, dry air, little or no humidity and comfortable nights characterize much of the weather through the years. Stormy westerly winds are out of the north, and a subtropical high-pressure belt is located to the south. The temperature in Manhattan Beach does not vary as much as in the surrounding areas due to the temperate effect of the ocean and the sea breeze, keeping the winters warmer and summers cooler. It is the combination of these factors and the people who choose to live here that makes the community a little bit of heaven on earth.
Today, as in the past, through social activities, education and business, as well as participation in local and community government, the city and its citizens strive to create a family-oriented town with stability and pride for future generations.
Chapter 1
Early Years
FIRST PEACE OFFICER
In 1881, several years prior to the incorporation of what is now Manhattan Beach, the nation was reading of the shootout at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona. In 1901, when the first survey map of the Manhattan Beach town site was filled, Butch Cassidy and his gang were holding up steam trains and robbing banks, with law enforcement in hot pursuit.
There were various titles for the guardians of the peace: town marshal, county sheriff, state or territorial ranger and federal marshal. A quote by the famous sheriff Bat Masterson described these men very simply as just ordinary men who could shoot straight and had the most utter courage and perfect nerve and for the most part, a keen sense of right and wrong.
In the late 1800s, unlike many of the other towns in Southern California that were very settled and thriving, there was little need for law enforcement in the yet undeveloped area that would eventually become the city of Manhattan Beach. The terrain along the ocean coastline was but shifting sand dunes with the landscape covered with scrub brush and flowers, and wildlife as the only inhabitants. In the early 1900s, the population began to grow with the subdivisions of the town sites. This led to a rising movement for the territory to petition to become its own town out from under the control of the City of Los Angeles.
On December 2, 1912, with returns counted by the County Board of Supervisors, it was agreed that the territory was a duly incorporated municipal corporation of the sixth class, under the name and style of City of Manhattan Beach,
becoming a self-governing community with an elected board of trustees. On December 7, 1812, Secretary of State Frank C. Jordan endorsed the findings.
The newly incorporated town, with a population of approximately six hundred, many of whom were only summer residents, was quick to put in place its own lawman. To our knowledge, there were no shootouts in early Manhattan Beach, but at the second meeting of the board of trustees, the first peace officer was appointed. Fred W. Petway became the city marshal, as well as the first fire fighting enforcement officer. Petway was on call twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, with little equipment or training for the apprehension of lawbreakers. The city paid so poorly for the position that Marshal Petway was obliged to work odd jobs to supplement his wage.
As for law and order in the new town, Frank C. Hill was selected as city attorney. The first law enforcement case occurred in February 1913, with a disturbance of the peace charged against Joseph E. Hastings. Citizen Hastings had been arrested by Marshal Petway, found guilty and fined $15.99 by Judge C.E. Jenkins.
Little is known about the early criminal element in the community. Nevertheless, there is one story that has been documented by many early settlers. It tells of the Marshal being notified of an intruder at the Daugherty home. The Marshal called for help to arrest the prowler. After the capture, and since the town was absent a jail, the prisoner was transported in a wagon to nearby Hermosa Beach. During the trip, the assailant jumped out and began running. Marshal Petway ordered him to halt, then, as the man continued running, Petway fired his shotgun and hit the prisoner in the leg. Instead of jail, the fleer was taken to a Redondo Beach hospital. After learning he did not have the authority to use the weapon, Marshal Fred W. Petway, upset, promptly resigned his position.
GENERAL WILLIAM STARKE ROSECRANS
As Sepulveda Boulevard continued to develop into a tax stream for the city’s coffers, Rosecrans Avenue on the west side of Sepulveda developed into residential housing. It would take many years before the east side of Rosecrans became a retail/office service area.
Rosecrans Avenue is the oldest street in Manhattan Beach that has retained its original identification. As it is with the naming of many streets, our northern boundary was named after a prominent personality.
William Starke Rosecrans was born on September 10, 1819, in Kingston, Ohio. Graduating from West Point in 1842 as a second lieutenant, a year later he was appointed as an assistant professor of philosophy and engineering at West Point. After an assignment in New England, Rosecrans resigned his commission in 1854 and went into private life, practicing engineering and architecture in Cincinnati and later in western Virginia.
Those who may be students of American Civil War history will know that Rosecrans served as an Ohio volunteer under G.B. McClellan. Brigadier General Rosecrans won many battles and replaced McClellan as commander in the Department of Ohio. He later became major general of volunteers and succeeded D.C. Buell in command of the Army of the Cumberland, only to be relieved of his command in 1863 after he was defeated by General Braxton Bragg’s Confederate forces in the battle of Chickamauga. He was later assigned to command the Department of Missouri. Rosecrans resigned from the United States Army on March 28, 1867.
After an outstanding service record, Brigadier General Rosecrans served as United States Minister to Mexico and headed mining operations in Mexico and California in the 1870s. He served two terms in Congress as a representative from California and later served as register of the United States Treasury from 1885 to 1893.
Upon retiring to California, the family settled in Lawndale. Rosecrans himself moved to Redondo Beach, where he lived at the 225-room Hotel Redondo—a luxury installation that had been built in 1890. It was beautifully maintained with many features and activities for its guests, as well as a spectacular view overlooking the Redondo harbor. Mr. William S. Rosecrans remained there until he died on March 11, 1898.
Extending several miles east of Manhattan Beach, the Rosecrans Corridor has been an inland transportation route from the early days of the San Gabriel Mission Indians. Like Sepulveda Boulevard, the dirt road was lined on either side with eucalyptus trees, planted as windbreaks by the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors.
Improvements began on Rosecrans Avenue with the development in 1911 of the Standard Oil Refinery, located in El Segundo at Manhattan Beach’s north boundary. Standard Park on the south side of Rosecrans in Manhattan Beach had been laid out shortly after the beginning of the refinery’s development. The Interstate Realty and Improvement Co. was selling building lots, 40 by 135 feet, in the park for only one dollar per week, with no interest, no taxes, no extras, reasonable building restrictions and free certificate of title.
In 1926, it was not unusual for the children of the house to care for farm animals. Little Charlene Modisett feeds the family’s chickens in the backyard of their home, located at 1036 Rosecrans Avenue, now the location of the Chevron station.
The park took in the area of what is now the Tree Section: south of Rosecrans Avenue, north of Manhattan Beach Boulevard, east to Sepulveda Boulevard and west to approximately Blanch Road. The price of a lot ranged from $275 to $350, with only $5 down and all payments, except the first, made to the City and County Bank of Los Angeles. To our knowledge, the first structure to be built on Rosecrans here in town was in 1911, located at 574.
One of the area’s residents, Captain H.C. Coe, owned property near the Standard Oil Company’s holdings. There he owned a grocery store on Rosecrans. He had been a river man in charge of some of the largest boats plying the Columbia River and was one of the founders of the Hood River Territory. The good captain was elected president of the city’s board of trustees in 1914, where he worked to improve the Standard Park area, which was struggling to get the amenities of gas and water lines. Roads in the area were still mostly sand.
In April 1914, Ordinance 79 was passed by the board of trustees for the widening of Rosecrans. Standard Oil in El Segundo to the north also pledged a thirty-foot strip of land in order to complete the project. However, it would not be paved. In 1915, with Ordinance 155, Thirty-seventh Street was renamed to Rosecrans Avenue from The Strand to Highland Avenue. Prior to this time, the road was but a wooden-planked walk to Bell Road. Beginning in 1921, several other ordinances were put into place to guard and curb various portions of Rosecrans.
This 1929 view looks eastward at the intersection of Rosecrans and Highland Avenue. At this time, Rosecrans defined the northern boundary of the town. The Metlox sign, eighteen feet long with sixteen-inch letters in light, cream color, hung directly over the center of Highland Avenue.
SANTA FE RAILROAD AND DEVELOPERS
By the end of the 1880s, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Company played an important part in the development of the area. However, the main purpose of the railroad was to carry freight to the Redondo Beach harbor. The tracks passed through Manhattan Beach on a strip of land now known as Veterans Park, located between Valley Drive and Ardmore Avenue.
North of Center Street (now Manhattan Beach Boulevard) stood a small freight platform with two seats back-to-back covered by a roof. This structure served as a rail station. There were trains running to and from Redondo Beach by way of Inglewood. The return trips left Redondo at 10:17 a.m. and at 7:15 p.m. When debarking from the train at Manhattan Beach, people had to plow through the sand, as there were no streets.
Potential settlers were drawn to the South Bay by brochures published by the development firms, such as the Redondo Beach and Centinela-Inglewood Land Companies. The pamphlets expounded on the virtues of this newfound area. A booklet entitled The Pacific Homeland,
published in 1888, described the adventure of the train trip: Across a little valley with wild flowers of brilliant and varied hues. Oh, what a lovely series of views are here presented as we are whirled southward along the hillside and parallel to the shore; and finally as we make a turn allowing us to look ahead from the car window we exclaim at the beautiful alignment of the shore and the picturesque effect of the headland and Point Vincente beyond.
Early resident Ethel Horner Launer described a day in 1900: "We walked on down the beach, passing the high sand dunes located in the vicinity of Highland Avenue. There was just a wide expanse of sand, dotted with little bushes of lupines, sand verbenas and tallow primroses. I do not remember any