Group hopes to honor city’s oil industry heritage
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A small group of residents are hoping to honor the
oil industry with a neighborhood park, commemorating the industry’s role
as an economic powerhouse for the city.
Arline Huff Howard and other residents want to rename Peninsula Park,
an eight-acre recreation area at Goldenwest Street and Summit Drive, as
Discovery Well Park because of its history.
The site was the first spot in the city that black gold -- oil that is
-- bubbled to the surface in May 1920, launching a boom for the city’s
development and economy.
“The population went from 1,500 to 5,000 people almost overnight,” she
said. “It’s important for children today to remember the important role
oil played in the development of this city.”
The city’s policy for naming parks requires recreation areas to be
named after the oldest living former mayor, said Jim Engle, deputy
director of community services.
However, he added, because of the historic significance of the park
and special city provisions, naming it after the oil well is a viable
alternative.
Eighty years ago, the Standard Oil Co. pumped the first oil out of
Surf City from its Huntington A-1 well, which stood where the park is
today. In 1960, the city dedicated a monument and plaque to mark the site
that spurred an oil boom along the coastline.
“The oil business has definitely contributed much more financially
than surfing, farming or anything else that has been done in the city,”
Engle said.
In its peak year of 1923, oil companies drew 33.8 million barrels of
oil out of the ground and grossed up to $462 million in 1959. City
officials said the oil industry produces much less crude these days,
though wells scattered throughout the community continue to pump.
Community Service commissioners were receptive to the idea at their
last meeting and will discuss the renaming before reconvening next month,
city officials said.
The issue will go to the commission’s Park Naming and Memorials
Committee for study, then it will be forwarded to the commission and
finally the City Council for a final decision.
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