|
1. The
Balboa Pavilion (1906) is the unquestioned focal point
of the Balboa Peninsula. Built as a Victorian bath house and
terminal for the Pacific Electric Red Car. Fashionably dressed
bathers arrived from the Greater Los Angeles area to spend
the day at Balboa frolicking in the Bay. The Pavilion has been
home to the big bands of the 30's & 40's, bingo parlor,
amusement arcade, sport fishing, harbor cruises, Catalina ferry
service, seafood restaurant, shell museum, and the first home
of the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Step inside and view the
pictures depicting this colorful past. The Balboa Pavilion,
listed in the National Register of Historic Places, is still
the center for marine recreation in Newport Beach.
2. The
Balboa Hotel (1905) was located on the site where our Balboa
Post Office stands today. Built in only 10 days to be ready
for the arrival of the big Pacific Electric Red Cars, this
two-story, single wall structure wasn't pretty but it housed
thousands of tourists throughout the years.
3. The
Rendezvous Ballroom (1928) was Southern California's premier
dance hall throughout the Swing Era of the 30's and 40's. All
the "big bands" - Stan Kenton, Dorsey Brothers, Harry James,
Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman - played at the Rendezvous until
1966 when it succumbed to fire. Today a condominium stands
on the locale. A marker on the corner of Washington Street
and Ocean Front commemorates the site.
4. The
Balboa Inn (1929) in its day, was the number one hostelry
on the Orange County Coast. The Inn has been remodeled and
modernized a number of times but its graceful Spanish architecture
remains virtually unchanged today. At one time the Balboa Theater,
operated by the colorful, hard-drinking, hard-swearing character
Madame LaRue, stood next to the Balboa Inn. Our early photo
of Main St. shows the theater on the far right.
5. The
Balboa Ferry (1919) began as a skiff, "The Ark", powered
by an outboard motor and carried oars ... just in case. Later
the ferry graduated to a cumbersome craft, "The Fat Ferry",
which could carry only one car. Founded by a Balboa Island
pioneer, Joe Beek, the ferry, running between the Balboa peninsula
and Balboa Island, remains in the Beek family. The sleek modern
craft crossing the bay today has come a long way ... and, they
each carry 3 autos as well as passengers.
6. The
Balboa Fun Zone (1936) was built on Abbott's Landing where
Mr. Abbott brought soil from the mainland and planted the Peninsula's
first trees. At one time the Fun Zone, a miniature amusement
park, covered the entire block between Palm Street and Washington
Street on the Bay Front. The ferris wheel and the merry-go-round
remain, nostalgic memories from an era which provided pleasure
to generations of visitors to Balboa.
7. Soto's
(1935) Japanese Curio Shop stood at the corner of Bay Avenue
and Main Street. Soto's was headquarters for all the curious
Balboa youngsters who pawed over his exotic merchandise. While
Soto was one of the most loved men in Balboa, he fell victim
to World War II hysteria and, with thousands of other loyal
Japanese-Americans, was sent to an internment camp. He was
sent to one of the worst, Poston, located on the Colorado River
in Arizona. Soto never made it back to his beloved shop.
8. The
Catalina Flight (1912) Today a plaque at the foot of the
Balboa Pier honors the memory of Glenn Martin, aviation pioneer,
who, on May 10, 1912, flew from Balboa Bay to Avalon and back
in a primitive hydroplane which he built in Santa Ana. The
flight took 37 minutes and was the longest, fastest over-water
flight ever recorded at that time.
9. The
Balboa Fire Station (1927) was for years the only governmental
building in Balboa. While primarily a fire station it did double
duty on Saturday nights as an impromptu holding cell for the
numerous citizens arrested for over-consumption of alcohol
during the rowdy days of Prohibition. Balboa was pure honky
tonk in those days. Today the location of the Fire Station/Police
Station is a parking lot adjacent to a public restroom...known
at the time as a "comfort station."
10. Flag
Pole (1991) Located on the green at the foot of the Balboa
Pier, the Flag Pole commemorates the Bicentennial of the adoption
of the Bill of Rights on December 15, 1791. The granite base
of the 80-foot flag pole, topped with the 20x30 foot flag,
is inscribed with the Preamble to the Constitution and the
First Ten Amendments.
|