The beauty of Sunset Beach
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Angelique Flores
If any town has charm, funk and elegance all at once, it’s Sunset Beach.
This small beach town stretches along Pacific Coast Highway, from Warner
Avenue to Anderson Street, covering the land from the ocean to Huntington
Harbour.
“It’s a piece of coast that time forgot,” said Bob Dowis, a 33-year
resident.
This weekend will hopefully jog some people’s memories of a place where
duck hunters once lodged, where rumrunners landed boats filled with
alcohol during Prohibition and where the Coast Guard watched for enemy
submarines during World War II.
The Sunset Beach Community Assn. revives its home tour on Saturday
afternoon with a 1 1/2-mile walk through the town’s historical homes and
establishments. Proceeds from the tour will go toward scholarships and a
new roof for the community center, where the volunteer firefighters work.
This quaint community of about 2,500 residents is virtually unknown. But
the small town has a full history that dates back to the turn of the
century, when the Sunset Beach Development Co. began selling parcels of
land for weekend cottages and cabins for duck hunters in 1904.
During the oil boom of the 1920s, Sunset Beach flourished. The train ran
through what is now the green belt along Pacific Avenue. Bootleggers
pulled their boats up on the beach. Duck hunters stayed in several of the
homes now on Bayview Drive on Sunset Island.
Almost a century later, the town has grown but hasn’t changed a whole
lot. During the 1970s, there was a prediction by the county that this
strip would be annexed by Huntington Beach or Seal Beach and would be
developed. The prediction was wrong.
There are still no schools, no churches and no libraries. Most of the
quiet area is filled with homes, each of a different shape, size and
color. Several of the houses have hand-painted flowers and fish. Paddles
and lifesavers hang outside. Some are refined, some funky.
Everything and everyone is welcome -- from million-dollar beachfront
homeowners to the smaller studios inhabited by surfers and artists.
“There’s not a social status thing here,” said George Chisler, a 27-year
resident who raised his family in the community.
Most of the businesses are restaurants and bars, with a few motels, some
surf shops and other smaller establishments. The only chain shops are a
Jack-In-The-Box at the town’s edge and a 7-Eleven.
“That was a big deal because it replaced Woody’s market,” said Dowis, who
remembers residents’ resistance to the neon signs along the highway.
Not too far from the 7-Eleven is o7 thef7 place: the post office. With
no mail delivery to any of the homes, everyone comes in to pick up their
mail. Notices of garage sales and local events are posted on the outside
bulletin board. The tiny room sometimes gets loud from all the chatter
between its occupants.
“Everybody knows everybody,” said Fredia Travis, one of the four women
who work at the post office. “There’s lots of love in Sunset Beach.”
The postal workers help spread some of that love themselves. During
December, they serve complimentary coffee and cookies. They will, on
occasion, personally deliver packages. They also help keep track of the
older residents and check on them if no one comes to pick up their mail.
This watchfulness extends to the residents, too. If someone is ill,
neighbors will no doubt be there with soup, ready to walk that person’s
pets, Dowis said.
Resident Kim Packer recalls when her son was missing for a few hours.
“Everyone was looking for him, the whole block shut off,” said Packer,
whose son was at the home of a new neighbor.
Neighbors have been known to reach out with this same courtesy and
concern for lost turtles and hamsters. This informal neighborhood watch
may be why there is so little crime.
“The biggest crime is someone drunk on a bicycle,” Ferris said.
This refuge from the hustle and bustle of the outside world is home to
many longtime residents who range from the very young to the very old,
from families to singles.
“There’s a privateness without the guarded gates. But there’s an openness
that we can go everywhere,” said Sylvia Ferris, who has lived on Sunset
Island for 13 years.
The community’s hot spots are Captain Jack’s -- a restaurant owned by the
late Jack Haley -- the Harbour House and Turc’s. Mother’s Tavern, which
used to be a speak-easy, attracts a crowd or motorcycle road warriors on
Sunday afternoons.
Sunset Beach is not a wild, loud party area like many other beach towns.
But that doesn’t mean there aren’t parties.
“Here on the island, it’s not unusual to have an impromptu barbecue in
the street,” Ferris said.
Fond memories for Bill Lovelace, a 20-year resident, are the “Clam Jams”
he used to throw in the late 1970s and early 1980s for his neighbors. The
parties would round up the locals for music, volleyball, bikini contests
and kegs. He eventually ended the bashes when too many outside residents
started attending, pushing the parties out of control.
Some of the traditional events that have continued are the Fireman’s Ball
in the fall, the Sunset Beach Arts Festival in May, the Christmas Parade
and the Pancake Breakfast in July.
“The Charm, the Funk and the Elegance of Sunset Beach” tour will take
place Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will be a light lunch.
Tickets are $20, or two for $35 in advance. They can be purchased at the
Community Lot at 12th Street and North Pacific Avenue, or in advance by
calling (562) 592-5913 or (310) 660-0909.
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