Showing posts with label Wintersburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wintersburg. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Rebuilding the pier in 1914

ABOVE: Huntington Beach's wooden pier, 1906, a few years before Pacific storms damaged it.  A fixture on the coast since the late 1800s, the community rallied to rebuild and reopen the pier in June 1914. (Photo, City of Huntington Beach archives)

   From their first arrival in Wintersburg Village and Huntington Beach township, the pioneer community gravitated toward the beach for fishing and recreation.  The wide, open stretches of sandy beach were open to everyone.  
  
LEFT: One of several beach scenes included in the 1933 publication, Echo, produced with the assistance of the Smeltzer Japanese Association, which met above the Tashima Market in Wintersburg Village.  (Photo, Orange County Young Men's Association publication, Echo, 1933) © All rights reserved.

   For the Japanese community in the early 1900s, the beach was a place were there were no restrictions or discrimination as was found in movie theaters in Garden Grove and the Walker's and Yost theaters in Santa Ana* where rope lines separated the Japanese and Mexican community from Caucasian theater goers.  The beach and pier were open and free.


RIGHT: Beach goers identified as Mr. Noguchi, Henry Kiyomi Akiyama (Charles Furuta's brother-in-law and fellow goldfish farmer), and Mr. Andow, at Huntington Beach circa 1915.  (Photo snip, University of California - Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 520) © All rights reserved


   "The most common beach which was used by the Japanese groups was Santiago Beach, which was on the terminal end of Bushard Street in Huntington Beach," recalled Clarence Nishizu during his 1982 oral history interview.**  "Another beach frequented was called the Jetty near the outlet of Santa Ana River between Huntington Beach and Newport." 

LEFT: Leonard Miyawaki with a leopard shark caught at Huntington Beach, circa 1924.  Leonard's father, Yatsumatsu Miyawaki, was a signer on the 1904 founding document for the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission.  Miyawaki also opened the first Japanese market in 1907 at 217 Main Street in the Talbert-Leatherman building, today the Longboard Restaurant and Pub. (Photo, University of California - Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 027) © All rights reserved.

   Nishizu said Japanese American groups "like the Japanese Language School, Orange County Young Mens' Association, judo groups, church groups" gathered at the beach for picnics, clamming, swimming and sunbathing, experiencing  no formal segregation, "no discrimination."  The beach then, as today, was one of the free public spaces for which there were no restrictions based on ethnicity.

   Journalist Neeta Marquis had written about the atmosphere in Orange County in 1913, observing the working relationships and friendships among the Japanese pioneer community and others in Orange CountyMarquis had come to interview the first clergy of the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Church, Reverend Joseph K. Inazawa and his wife, Kate Goodman.  While their marriage made headlines around the world, it was simply accepted in Wintersburg.  Marquis noted there were many multi cultural ventures and civic events.

   “…others all over Southern California are having similar experiences in both the business and the social world—very especially among the agricultural classes owning and working the great celery fields of Orange County," wrote Marquis.  "...The entire countryside accepted the invitation of the Japanese to join them in their celebration of the Emperor’s last birthday."

ABOVE: Clamming at Huntington Beach, circa 1935. (Photo, University of California - Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 355) © All rights reserved.

   Marquis was writing about events in 1912 that brought Orange Countians together.  At that time, much of the Huntington Beach pier had fallen into the sea after fierce Pacific storms.  

   The Huntington Beach board of trustees (predecessor to the city council), approved Ordinance No. 91 on May 13, 1912, regarding the issuance of a $70,000 bond for the "construction and completion of a municipal wharf for the water front."  Two weeks later, Huntington Beach leaders would meet with the growing Japanese community from Wintersburg Village and the surrounding area.  If Huntington Beach was going to rebuild its pier, the township would need help from around the County.

ABOVE: A gathering on the steps of the Huntington Inn, May 31, 1912, thought to be about fundraising support for the pier.  The crowd includes Huntington Beach's first mayor, Ed Manning (second row, far right in light-color suit),   another Huntington Beach mayor, Orange County supervisor, and pioneer realtor, Thomas Talbert (second row on step, fourth from left with hat in hand), Wintersburg Mission clergy, Reverend Hisakichi Terasawa (front row, fourth from right), Charles Mitsuji Furuta (front row below step, second from left), and at center next to Rev. Terasawa, a two-time Huntington Beach mayor (1914-1916 and 1918-1919) Eugene French. (Photo, Wintersburg Presbyterian Church) © All rights reserved

   Relationships among Huntington Beach leaders and those in Wintersburg Village had already been established.  When the Wintersburg Mission sought donations for the 1910 Mission building, contributions came from around the County and from Huntington Beach businesses and individuals.  Among the names recorded as contributing to the Wintersburg Mission are some of Huntington Beach township's founding families.


Left: From the archives of the present-day Wintersburg Presbyterian Church, a report listing the donors for the 1910 Mission in Wintersburg Village. (Image, Wintersburg Presbyterian Church)

   Asking for community help was a pioneer farming country practice, everyone helped each other.  Instead of raising a barn, this time the community raised a pier.

   When the pier was finally ready to re-open in 1914---one hundred years ago this month---the community held a party the likes of which had not been seen before.  A reported total of 20,000 people attended the two-day festivities, many riding Henry Huntington's Pacific Electric Railway to town.  There would be music and baseball (the team from Garden Grove vs. the Pacific Electric team), swimming and diving competitions, and a sack race.  

   One of the exciting highlights of the pier re-dedication was the surfing demonstration by Hawaiian-Irish surfer George Freeth, considered the first surfer in Southern California and the first to surf the pier.  He would forever set the tone for future generations: surfing the Huntington Beach pier means you're a pro.

ABOVE: A group from the Garden Grove Japanese Language School at an outing at Huntington Beach, circa 1927.  The Garden Grove school was located at 10771 Sherman Street near Garden Grove Boulevard and was demolished to make way for a Costco shopping center, despite its historic status. (Photo snip, University of California - Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 204) © All rights reserved.


   There was another featured event that day that demonstrated the support and community involvement of the Japanese pioneer community.  After George Freeth's "surf board riding" and before the grand finale of the concert band and pier illumination, thousands of visitors witnessed a "Japanese fencing and sword dance" demonstration, most likely a kembu performance.  Like all the day's events, the performance represented the community and those who had supported the rebuilding of the pier.


Right: The June 12, 1914, Huntington Beach News lists events planned for June 20 to mark the dedication of the new concrete pier.  The Huntington Beach News reported 20,000 visitors came for the pier dedication and provides the events calendar with Japanese fencing and sword dance at 4:30 p.m., just before the band concert and pier "illumination."  Reverend Kenji Kikuchi of the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission belonged to one of the many Japanese fencing clubs

   The Japanese sword dance also was an indicator of Samurai origins for some.  Reverend Terasawa and Reverend Kenji Kikuchi of the Wintersburg Mission, Yukiko Yajima Furuta, Masako Tashima of Wintersburg's Tashima Market, Clarence Nishizu, and Maki Kanno (mother of Fountain Valley's first mayor, James Kanno), among others, had Samurai ancestry.  Community involvement and civic responsibility was second nature.

   "We were indoctrinated with the spirit of bushido..." explained Clarence Nishizu in his oral history interview.**  "There are countless stories in Japanese history of a Samurai giving his life to prove the avowed sense of ethical code of loyalty to one's lord. This is synonymous to the spirit of Americanism as written in the American creed to love one's country and to support its Constitution and defend it against all enemies."

   Performed in feudal times as an exercise in courage or mental concentration, it is performed by women and men.  A video of a sword dance performed in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ste5UCxKqMs  

ABOVE: A generation after the Issei, or Japanese immigrants arrived in Orange County, the American-born Nisei had fully adopted the Southern California beach lifestyle.  An account of the Japanese baseball league that practiced across the street from the Mission in Wintersburg Village notes the coach had trouble getting players to practice, as they preferred the beach. (Photo, A humorously titled image of a gathering at Huntington Beach from the Orange County Young Men's Association publication, Echo, from 1933) © All rights reserved.
   
   Imagine the hushed crowd at the pier in 1914 as they watched, the ocean waves crashing in the background.  Undoubtedly, few in the crowd had seen a sword dance before that day. 

   The sword dance also was a signal that Huntington Beach was inviting the world to take a look at the growing beach town.  The pioneer community already spoke a half dozen languages in addition to English and Japanese, including Spanish, Italian, German, Armenian and Tagalog.  California was gearing up for the Panama Pacific International Exposition in 1915, marking the opening of the Atlantic to the Pacific via the Panama Canal.  There was an enthusiasm in California for all things new, inventive, and international.  On June 20, 1914, the town was bubbling over with civic pride, thousands of people, and a reported 1500 automobiles parked up and down the coastline. 

ABOVE: A beach party at Huntington Beach, circa 1933-1935.  The Japanese Language Schools, Mission and Japanese Association regularly held events at the beach and in Huntington Beach's downtown parks. (Photo, University of California - Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 357) © All rights reserved.

One hundred years of gratitude
   The Huntington Beach pier has battled Pacific storms more than once, with the community rebuilding it each time.  In 1988, the ocean again took parts of the pier out to sea.  

   Among those who contributed to rebuild the pier for its 1992 re-opening, was Huntington Beach's Sister City of Anjo, Japan, with a contribution of $92,000.00---more than the total cost of the pier in 1914.  The design replicated the architectural structure of the 1914 pier.

   On June 21 and 22 this year, special events will remember Huntington Beach's "100 Years of Surfing."  There again will be surfing demonstrations, music, speeches (see information at http://www.huntingtonbeachca.gov/announcements/attachments/100Years_Postcard-may%2028%20%283%29.jpg

   As the community marks the 100-year anniversary  of surfing at the"longest pier on the coast," we also remember and extend gratitude to the Japanese pioneers in 1912 and, in more recent times, our friends in Anjo, Japan, who helped build it. 


*Walker's Theater in Santa Ana originally opened as the Temple Theater in 1909.  It was demolished in the early 1960s.  The Yost Theater still exists as a historic music and event venue on Spurgeon Street in Santa Ana.
** Clarence Nishizu's oral history interview was conducted in 1982 for the Honorable Stephen K. Tamura Orange County Japanese American Oral History Project by Professor Emeritus Arthur A. Hansen.
 ***We continue to identify the people in this photograph.  If you spot someone you know (and can document the identity), please contact Historic Wintersburg via SurfCityWriter@yahoo.com 

© All rights reserved.  No part of the Historic Wintersburg blog may be reproduced or duplicated without prior written permission from the author and publisher, M. Adams Urashima.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Book discussion: The history behind the fence

The 1912 bungalow of Charles and Yukiko Furuta, behind the green fence at Historic Wintersburg, a rare pre-California Alien Land Law of 1913 property.  There are six historical structures on the property, spanning the founding of the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission in 1904 to the post-World War II return of Japanese Americans to Huntington Beach.

   Join author Mary Adams Urashima at the Huntington Beach Central Library, 2 p.m., Saturday, April 19, Rooms C & D, for a visual presentation and discussion of the pioneer history detailed in Historic Wintersburg in Huntington Beach.

   The book discussion will include seldom seen photographs of California's Japanese pioneers and trace the history that helped shape Huntington Beach and Orange County.

Left: The Furuta bungalow in 2011, still stands at Historic Wintersburg, home to the Furuta Gold Fish Farm and the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission. © All rights reserved.

   Copies of the book will be available for sale after the discussion, which will include time for audience questions.  Books also are available at the Huntington Beach Barnes & Noble and online through the publisher, History Press, at https://historypress.net/catalogue/bookstore/books/Historic-Wintersburg-in-Huntington-Beach/9781626193116

   Find out why Historic Wintersburg is nominated for America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places and why the effort to save it has been chronicled in PreservationNation, Huffington Post, Rafu Shimpo, KCET public television's LA Letters, Orange County Register and Los Angeles Times (recent media coverage at http://historicwintersburg.blogspot.com/2014/03/historic-wintersburg-in-news.html).

A gathering on the steps of the Huntington Inn, circa 1912, believed to be about fundraising to rebuild the pier.  Charles Mitsuji Furuta is in front row, second from left. Huntington Beach's first mayor, Ed Manning, is second row, far right in light-color suit.  Another Huntington Beach mayor, Orange County supervisor, and pioneer realtor, Thomas Talbert, is in the second row (on step), fourth from left with hat in hand.  (Photo: Courtesy of Wintersburg Presbyterian Church.) © All rights reserved.

   From the first July 4th celebrations in Huntington Beach, the Japanese community's presence was evident.  The "Japanese Association of Wintersburg" donated and presented the fireworks show in 1905 at a "baseball field" (likely Triangle Park off Main Street).  

   By 1907, the Talbert-Leatherman building became Huntington Beach's first Japanese market, the "Rock Bottom" market, run by Yasumatsu Miyawaki (today, this building is the Longboard Restaurant and Pub at 217 Main Street).  Miyawaki was a signator on the founding document for the Wintersburg Japanese Mission in 1904.

The Aoki kendo and judo hall at the Masami Sasaki chili pepper warehouses on Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach, circa 1930, where today's Newland Center is located.  The award winning judo teams from Huntington Beach were part of a judo demonstration at the Xth Olympiad in Los Angeles in 1932. (Photo snip, courtesy of California State University Fullerton Center for Oral and Public History, PJA 260) © All rights reserved.

   The Huntington Beach pier celebration in 1914 included the Japanese community of Wintersburg Village and the surrounding area.  Special events of the day on June 20, 1914, included Japanese fencing and sword dancing, following the surfing demonstration by George FreethThis year marks the 100-year anniversary of the re-dedication of the pier and the 110th-year anniversary of the founding of the Wintersburg Japanese Mission.  

Koha Takeishi in flight over Wintersburg Village farmland in 1913, in the plane bought for him by local farmers.  A graduate of the Curtiss Flying School, the university student worked the celery fields in Wintersburg during summer breaks.  His story is detailed in the book, Historic Wintersburg in Huntington Beach. (Photo courtesy of the Furuta family) © All rights reserved.

   The early 1900s included pioneer aviation feats, agricultural innovations, archaeological finds in the peatlands, the growth of the Wintersburg Japanese Mission, and the development of Wintersburg Village's three goldfish farms, a unique enterprise in Orange County.  

   Local families considered part of Huntington Beach history---such as the Gothards, Nichols, Winters, Coles, Moores--lived in Wintersburg Village.  The Newland family (of the Newland House Museum at Adams Avenue and Beach Boulevard) contributed to the development of the 1906 Wintersburg M.E. Church, today known as the Warner Avenue Baptist Church, and were part of a church organization that donated to the Wintersburg Japanese Mission.  


   Early Huntington Beach businesses, such as the Savings Bank of Huntington Beach at Main Street and Walnut Avenue, and the Halsell Drug Company, (Eddie Darling's pharmacy) on Main Street, donated to the building fund for the Wintersburg Japanese Mission.

Left: A 1911 letter to Reverend Joseph K. Inazawa with a five-dollar donation from Huntington Beach pharmacist Eddie "E.H." Darling to help retire the construction debt for the 1910 Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission.  (Photo: Courtesy of Wintersburg Presbyterian Church.) © All rights reserved.

   Almost sixty years ago in 1957, Wintersburg Village was annexed into Huntington Beach, solidifying the community relationship that began in the late 1800s.

   Lost from local city records in the years since World War II, the history of Japanese Americans in Huntington Beach and Orange County is a lesson in the pioneer spirit and perseverance necessary for the settlement of America.  Learn more about Historic Wintersburg by joining the discussion at the Library!

BOOK SIGNING: 2 P.M., SATURDAY, APRIL 19, HUNTINGTON BEACH CENTRAL LIBRARY, located at 7111 Talbert Avenue at Huntington Beach Central Park.  There is ample free public parking.

AUTHOR FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mary-Adams-Urashima/122844011260256
 

Historic Wintersburg Preservation Task Force DONATE TO PRESERVATION: http://www.huntingtonbeachca.gov/i_want_to/give/donation-wintersburg.cfm
 

Historic Wintersburg Preservation Task Force FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Historic-Wintersburg-Preservation-Task-Force/433990979985360

© All rights reserved.  No part of the Historic Wintersburg blog may be reproduced or duplicated without prior written permission from the author and publisher, M. Adams Urashima.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Saving American history

ABOVE: A Sunday school class at the Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission, circa 1920s. (Photo courtesy of California State University Fullerton, Center for Oral and Public History, 032)
    
   Our sincere thanks to the wonderful people and organizations who have sent letters in support of the preservation of Historic Wintersburg.  This list will be updated as more support letters arrive. (Updated August 13, 2013)

   The discussion regarding the draft Environmental Impact Report to rezone the Historic Wintersburg property to commercial / industrial and demolish the historic structures continues at the Huntington Beach Planning Commission, 7 p.m., August 13 (postponed from June 25), at Huntington Beach City Hall, 2000 Main Street.

UPDATE: Read Rafu Shimpo article on Historic Wintersburg discussion, http://www.rafu.com/2013/08/huntington-beach-planning-commission-to-discuss-wintersburg-preservation/


PUBLIC OFFICIALS

Congressman Michael M. Honda
Congresswoman Judy Chu 
Congressman Mark Takano
California State Senator Lou Correa
California State Senator Ted W. Lieu
California Assemblyman Al Muratsuchi
Los Angeles Commissioner Warren T. Furutani (former California Assembly member)


ORGANIZATIONS

Asian Pacific Islanders in Historic Preservation (APIAHiP), Washington, D.C.
Manzanar Committee, California
Friends of Heart Mountain, Wyoming
Orange County Historical Commission
California Preservation Foundation
Preserving California’s Japantowns
Japanese American National Museum
Japanese American Historical Society of Southern California
Japanese American Citizens League, Washington, D.C.
Japanese American Citizens League, Pacific Southwest
Little Tokyo Service Center, Los Angeles
Little Tokyo Historical Society
Chinese American Historical Society of Southern California
Gardena Valley Japanese Cultural Institute
San Fernando Valley Japanese American Community Center
UTLA, Asian Pacific Educators Committee
Wintersburg Presbyterian Church, Orange County
City of Huntington Beach Historic Resources Board
Huntington Beach Historical Society
Huntington Beach Downtown Residents Association
Huntington Beach Neighbors
Huntington Beach Tomorrow
California-Nevada Barn Alliance
National Barn Alliance
Whittier Historic Resources Commission
Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California
OCA – Asian Pacific American Advocates, Washington, D.C.
The Nikkei for Civil Rights/Redress (NCRR)

INDIVIDUALS 
  • Mary Adams Urashima, chair, Historic Wintersburg Preservation Task Force, author, Historic Wintersburg
  • Rev. Dr. Greg Kimura, President and CEO, Japanese American National Museum
  • Fumiko Carol Fujita, Little Tokyo Historical Society
  • Tadashi Kowta, Volunteer, Little Tokyo Historical Society, Son of Rev. Sohei Kowta of Wintersburg Japanese Presbyterian Mission (lived in Manse)
  • Kanji Sahara, Japanese American Citizens League
  • Douglas McIntosh, archaeologist, pioneer family of Wintersburg Village
  • Professor Emeritus Arthur A. Hansen, California State University – Fullerton
  • Peyton Hall, FAIA, Adjunct Professor, Heritage Conservation Program – School of Architecture, University of Southern California
  • Stacha Khatib, Huntington Beach, member Historic Wintersburg Task Force
  • Barbara Haynes, member, Huntington Beach Historic Resources Board, member Historic Wintersburg Task Force
  • Gloria Alvarez, Chair, Huntington Beach Historic Resources Board, member Historic Wintersburg Task Force
  • Kim Kramer, President, Huntington Beach Downtown Residents Association
  • John Seiro Matsuda, Gardena
  • Stephen Crawford, Laguna Beach
  • Mariko Iguchi
  • Richardson Grey, Huntington Beach
  • Evelyn Yee, Associate Professor, Asuza Pacific University
  • Michi Tanioka
  • Mas Ohsiro
  • James Hosada
  • James V. Vitale, AIA
  • Robert Crittendon, Author, Barn in the U.S.A.
  • Yukio Kawaratani, Director – Little Tokyo Historical Society
  • Chris Koyama
  • Steve Sakurai
  • Janice Yen, Nikkei for Civil Rights & Redress
  • Jane Gothold, Whittier Historic Resources Commission
  • Mary Farrell, Manzanar National Historic Site archaeologist
  • Jeff Burton, Manzanar National Historic Site archaeologist
  • Michael Okamura, President - Little Tokyo Historical Society
  • Lynn Johsz, Huntington Beach
  • Dave Wentworth, Sr., Great grandson of Huntington Beach’s first mayor Ed Manning, member, Huntington Beach Historic Resources Board, member Historic Wintersburg Task Force
  • Elaine Parker,  Volunteer member  of the Historic Wintersburg Task Force
  • Jean-Paul deGuzman, Ph.D. candidate, Department of History, UCLA; Historic Tuna Canyon Coalition
  • Judy Lee, Riverside Metropolitan Museum, Save Our Chinatown Committee-Riverside, Chinese Historical Society of Southern California member
  • Kay Ochi, Retired high school teacher, 30-year member of Nikkei for Civil Rights & Redress  
  • Beth Padon, Archaeologist, Discovery Works
  • Ryan Yokota, PhD Candidate in the History Department at the University of Chicago, born and raised in Huntington Beach, served on the Huntington Beach Youth Board 
  • Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Ph.D., George and Sakaye Aratani Endowed Chair, Asian American Studies Department, UCLA 
  • Tom Fujii, The Nikkei for Civil Rights/Redress (NCRR) 
  • Donna Graves, Preserving California's Japantowns 
  • Sandra Vaughan, Huntington Beach  
  • Stone S. Ishimaru, American Heritage Archive, Los Angeles
  • Richard Katsuda, Co-Chairman, Nikkei for Civil Rights and Redress 
  • M. Rosalind Sagara, founding member and current chair of the Save Our Chinatown Committee, Riverside, California