A LOOK BACK -- JERRY PERSON
I was honored to have been a witness to a real Huntington Beach
historical event on April 26.
I, along with about 50 others, was seated in the mail processing room
of the Warner Avenue Post Office. Included in this party were many
postal bigwigs and City Councilman Dave Garofalo. We were here to
witness the swearing in of Huntington Beach’s first female postmaster --
Jeanne Hannahs.
At 12:06 p.m., Bill Almaraz stood at the podium to ask Hannahs to
raise her right hand. With that, Almaraz administered the oath to
Hannahs, making her the 16th postmaster in Huntington Beach’s long
history.
Hannahs is a true California native, having been born in Riverside.
Starting her career in the postal service in 1970, she quickly rose to
supervisor in 1985. She came to the Warner Avenue Post Office in 1996 as
manager of operations.
She now joins a long line of Huntington Beach postmasters that reach
back to the very roots of our town and even back to the Pacific City days
of 1901 to 1903.
When the city changed its name to Huntington Beach in 1904, this area
was still very remote to the rest of the country. The city hall for
Pacific City was on the upper floor of a building that still exists at
122 Main St. On the first floor was Smith’s Grocery and inside that
unassuming store, our first post office began.
Walter C. Smith was not only our grocer, but also served as the city’s
first postmaster. In late 1905, Smith turned over the duties of
postmaster to I.M. Clippinger.
In the 1920s, the post office was in a small office on the side of the
old Security Pacific building at 314 Walnut St. When the great earthquake
of 1933 struck Huntington Beach, Postmaster Walter T. Clapp and his
assistant Martin Murrey collected mail and sold stamps in the street in
front of that post office.
Just after the quake, the post office was relocated to 120 Main St.
for a short time. J. Ed Huston was our postmaster when the modern (for
its time) post office was constructed at Main and Olive in 1935 and
dedicated Dec. 7 of that year.
We now have three post offices in Huntington Beach employing 430
people. Welcome Postmaster Hannahs to Huntington Beach history.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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